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There Has Been No Silent Revolution: A decade of empowerment for women in rural Tamil Nadu

Isabelle Guérin, Sébastien Michiels (), Christophe Nordman, Elena Reboul and Govindan Venkatasubramanian ()
Additional contact information
Sébastien Michiels: IRD, IFP (Pondicherry, India)
Elena Reboul: Université Paris Diderot, Cessma (Social Science Center Studies in African, American and Asian Worlds)
Govindan Venkatasubramanian: IFP (Pondicherry, India)

No DT/2020/04, Working Papers from DIAL (Développement, Institutions et Mondialisation)

Abstract: In 2003, the then Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu in southern India, Jayaram Jayalalithaa, gave a speech about the "silent revolution" of the emancipation of Indian women. But 15 years on, regrettably, the promises of that revolution do not seem to have been fulfilled. Thanks to the various programmes set up to champion women's empowerment (involving local NGOs, public programmes and international support), women are now more prominent in certain public spaces and are able to play a genuine advocacy role as regards the public authorities. Girls education has also significantly improved. But it has not brought about improved employment opportunities. Women are in fact losing out on paid employment (as is the case in India as a whole). They are also heavily indebted (not only from microcredit, but also informal lending and lending from private financial companies). Their indebtedness is disproportionate to their income, and compared to men. Moreover, women almost exclusively put debt towards the social reproduction of families. Reduced opportunities for paid employment and massive debt have hit Dalit women particularly hard. Our analyses use data collected over more than a decade in a rural area of Tamil Nadu, drawing together ethnography and quantitative data, including panel data (2010-2016). They shed light on the complexity of social change, intertwining forms of domination (here, caste and gender), and the ambiguous qualities of so-called empowerment programmes, whose impacts have been various and unexpected.

Keywords: empowerment; gender; labour; debt; microcredit; India (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: G51 J16 J22 O12 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 17 pages
Date: 2020-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hme and nep-mfd
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