Women's Empowerment Revisited: From Individual to Collective Power among the Export Sector Workers of Bangladesh

Naomi Hossain
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Abstract

Bangladesh has become known as something of a success in advancing gender equality since the 1990s. There have been rapid gains in a number of social and economic domains, yet by most objective standards the current condition and status of women and girls within Bangladeshi society remain low. Rapid progress has come about under conditions of mass poverty and interlocking forms of social disadvantage, political instability and under-development, overlain with persistent ‘classic’ forms of patriarchy. Mass employment of women and girls in the country's flagship export sector – the readymade garments (RMG) sector – has been one of the more visible and prominent changes in women's lives since its late 1970s' introduction.

Whether and the extent to which RMG or garments employment has changed the lives of women workers for the better has been the subject of much debate, and the research and analysis it has generated offers valuable insights into the processes of economic and social empowerment for poor women in low income developing countries. Yet as this paper notes, close observers of social change in Bangladesh have become dissatisfied with the limits of a focus on individual economic empowerment. Paid work may enable some women to negotiate the ‘structures of constraint’ that shape their lives and relationships, but what of the structures of constraint themselves? In the Bangladesh context the experience of mass RMG employment has given rise to questions about whether women have gained greater recognition as citizens with rights and roles as carers in the private and political actors within the public spheres. Revisiting the question of women's empowerment in this context means interrogating whether paid employment has contributed to investments in the education and skills of women and girls, improvements in their public safety and rights to occupy public space. Given labour militancy in the sector and its partial successes in raising the minimum wage, what has the experience of labour politics meant for women's political empowerment?

Drawing mainly on the rich literature available on women's RMG employment, this paper explores the wider and less well-documented effects of such employment on public policy relating to gender equality in these areas. It concludes that the overall direction of change in the industry points plainly to the need for investments in worker productivity, with a host of implications for women's work and gender equality more broadly. Factory owners have to date shown few signs of recognising their interests in supporting better state health, education and public safety for women and girls, or changing management practices to retain and raise productivity of skilled women workers. Yet with downward pressure on wages increasingly effectively resisted by workers at a time of global economic volatility and rising living costs, the tide may now be turning for the RMG workers of Bangladesh. Productivity gains require the state and the industry to treat women workers as full citizens with public policies that promote their skills and safety and respect, and which guarantee the representation of their rights and demands. RMG employment continues to be a source of empowerment for women in Bangladesh, but social and economic change means that that power now depends less on the individual economic effects of paid work on household decision-making than it once did. RMG employment is increasingly a source of power for women because of its more collective effects on women's citizenship and political agency. This matters all the more because of how this group is exposed to the volatilities of the global economy.

重新审视妇女赋权:孟加拉国出口部门工人从个人权力到集体权力
自上世纪90年代以来,孟加拉国在推进性别平等方面取得了一定的成功。在一些社会和经济领域取得了迅速的进展,但以大多数客观标准衡量,妇女和女孩在孟加拉国社会中的现状和地位仍然很低。快速的进步是在大量贫困和连锁的社会劣势、政治不稳定和不发达的条件下实现的,并与持续存在的“经典”父权制形式重叠。自20世纪70年代末引入成衣出口部门以来,妇女和女孩在该国的主要出口部门——成衣出口部门大量就业,这是妇女生活中较为明显和显著的变化之一。RMG或服装就业是否以及在多大程度上改善了女工的生活一直是许多辩论的主题,它所产生的研究和分析为低收入发展中国家贫穷妇女的经济和社会赋权进程提供了宝贵的见解。然而,正如本文所指出的,密切关注孟加拉国社会变革的观察家已经对关注个人经济赋权的局限性感到不满。有偿工作可能使一些女性能够与塑造她们生活和人际关系的“约束结构”进行谈判,但约束结构本身呢?在孟加拉国的情况下,大批RMG就业的经验引起了一些问题,即妇女是否作为公民获得了更多的承认,在私人和公共领域的政治行为者中享有权利和发挥照顾者的作用。在这种情况下,重新审议赋予妇女权力的问题意味着要询问有偿就业是否有助于对妇女和女孩的教育和技能的投资,改善她们的公共安全和占有公共空间的权利。鉴于该行业的劳工战斗性及其在提高最低工资方面的部分成功,劳工政治的经验对妇女的政治赋权意味着什么?本文主要利用有关妇女RMG就业的丰富文献,探讨了此类就业对这些领域中与性别平等有关的公共政策的更广泛和较少记录的影响。报告的结论是,该行业变革的总体方向明确指出,需要对工人生产率进行投资,这对女性的工作和更广泛的性别平等产生了一系列影响。迄今为止,几乎没有迹象表明工厂主认识到,支持改善妇女和女孩的国家卫生、教育和公共安全,或改变管理做法以留住和提高熟练女工的生产率,对他们有好处。然而,在全球经济动荡和生活成本不断上升的情况下,工人们越来越有效地抵制了工资下降的压力,现在孟加拉国RMG工人的趋势可能正在转变。生产率的提高要求国家和行业将女工视为完全的公民,制定公共政策,促进她们的技能、安全和尊重,并保证她们的权利和要求得到体现。在孟加拉国,RMG就业仍然是赋予妇女权力的一个来源,但社会和经济变化意味着,这种权力现在不像以前那样依赖于有偿工作对家庭决策的个人经济影响。RMG就业日益成为妇女权力的来源,因为它对妇女的公民身份和政治机构具有更大的集体影响。考虑到这一群体受到全球经济波动的影响,这一点尤为重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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