Graduation Year
2011
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Granting Department
Anthropology
Major Professor
Kevin Yelvington, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Stephen Thornton, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Mark Amen, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Maria Crummett, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Susan Greenbaum, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Rebecca Zarger, Ph.D.
Keywords
globalization, culture, women, factory, stratification
Abstract
This study is about Tunisian women's work and lives in the present era of economic neoliberalism. The focus is women in the city of Bizerte, Tunisia, both those who work in Bizerte's export processing zone (EPZ), as well as those who work outside it. This study is a qualitative examination of formal and informal employment, set inside and outside of women's traditional political and economic domain, the home. Through ethnography of women's work and lives, this study's purpose is to contribute evidence against conflating women's "empowerment" with incorporation into global production. However, this study also lends itself to considerations of the possibilities for exertions of power, powers that women in Bizerte now seek that opened through the forces of globalization.
Scholar Commons Citation
Oueslati-Porter, Claire Therese, "The Maghreb Maquiladora: Gender, Labor, and Socio-Economic Power in a Tunisian Export Processing Zone" (2011). USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/etd/3737
Included in
American Studies Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons, Women's Studies Commons