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Journal ArticleDOI

Reproduction, production and the sexual division of labour.

Lourdes Beneria
- 01 Sep 1979 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 3, pp 203-225
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TLDR
The argument is that male domination develops around the need to control reproduction in its different aspects; the concept of reproduction used here indicates a dynamic process of change linked with the perpetuation of social systems.
Abstract
PIP: This basically economic treatise elaborates the thesis that the focal point of women's economic activities is provided by their special role in the reproduction of the labor force. Given that change in sex roles is necessary in order not to perpetuate a division of labor which places women in subordinate positions, this paper attempts to analyze the nature and functions of traditional sex roles and to study the structures that have supported them through generations in an effort to conceptualize the relevant issues and to set up a general framework from which change in social structure relating to women and their economic dependency can proceed. In addition, specific studies of concrete situations observed within and across countries and cultural barriers are used for illustration. The argument, simply stated, which the paper seeks to prove, is that male domination develops around the need to control reproduction in its different aspects; the concept of reproduction used here indicates a dynamic process of change linked with the perpetuation of social systems. It includes social as well as physical reproduction, and its meaning therefore goes beyond that of reproduction of human beings. This concept of reproduction is isolated in discussions of production and the sexual division of labor, including agrarian structures and modes of production; the commercialization and proletarization of agriculture; and the availability of labor resources and development of wage labor markets. The implications of this concept of reproduction in population policy, specifically population control, are not explicitly discussed but are tremendously important.

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Citations
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Expanding understanding of service exchange and value co-creation: a social construction approach

TL;DR: In this article, a new framework for understanding how the concepts of service exchange and value co-creation are affected by recognizing that they are embedded in social systems is presented, and the authors argue that value should be understood as value-in-social context and that value is a social construction.
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Primitive accumulation, accumulation by dispossession, accumulation by ‘extra-economic’ means

TL;DR: The authors review recent uses and transformations of the primitive accumulation that focus on its persistence within the Global North, addressing especially the political implications that attend different readings of primitive accumulation in the era of neoliberal globalization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feminization of the labor force: The effects of long-term development and structural adjustment

TL;DR: This paper analyzed the relationship between women's share of the labor force and the processes of long-term economic development, and macroeconomic changes associated with structural adjustment using cross-country data pooled for 1985 and 1990.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a greater integration of gender in economics

TL;DR: This paper argued that women's work and its inclusion in labor force and national accounting statistics has made progress toward engendering economic analysis and pointed out that the influence of postmodernism and the development of feminist theory have laid the basis for the task of transforming economics and ensembling theory and policy, and that feminist analysis has shifted from its main concentration on microeconomics to the discussion of macroeconomics.
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State power beyond the `territorial trap': the internationalization of the state

TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical approach to internationalization of the state is outlined, showing how specific factions of capitalist classes can end up sharing concrete interests in specific state policies across national boundaries.
References
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Women's Role in Economic Development

Ester Boserup
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the impact of agricultural modernization on the employment of women in rural and urban areas of Africa, focusing on the effects of women's status loss of status under European rule.