ISSN (Print) - 0012-9976 | ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846

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Home-Based Work and Issues of Gender and Space

This article studies the experiences of a group of women workers involved in home-based work for a food processing unit in Kerala, where membership to Kudumbashree, the state-centric civil society organisation, is necessary for participation. The theoretical aspects of space and gender, in the context of how they are mutually formed and how gendered spaces are produced in the workers' everyday lives are analysed. A geographical explanation of the formation of such gendered spaces under home-based production is presented, following which everyday labour relations and the framing of workers' response strategies, which brought capital and labour to the negotiating table, are illustrated.

This article is based on my PhD research, completed at the Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram. Thanks are due to J Devika, to the workers and the families I had interviewed, to the referees, and to Anant Kamath.

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