2022
DOI: 10.1177/04866134221123817
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Gender, Social Protection, and Crises of Social Reproduction: Contextualizing NREGA

Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the importance of social protection programs such as India’s Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA). And yet, acute crises such as pandemics are layered upon existing inequalities of gender and caste in India. We show that a distinctive feature of twenty-first-century Indian capitalism is a restructuring of the caste-gender division of labor in rural India, such that women’s unpaid labor of social reproduction has increased, particularly for women f… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
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“…Indeed, if the lens of social reproduction provides exciting new avenues to reclaim a more inclusive history of capitalism as a whole, it must also offer a chance to review key debates in the political economy of agrarian change. A growing set of studies grappling with 'decolonising' and decentring social reproduction approaches by focusing on the Global South and/or informal work have also focused on agrarian systems (e.g., Baglioni, 2022;Cousins et al, 2018;Fernandez, 2018;Hornby & Cousins, 2019;Rao & Ramnarain, 2023;Stevano, 2019). Others have highlighted the embeddedness of agrarian labour regimes in 'reproduction zones' (e.g., Pattenden, 2018) or, more recently, their interconnections with varied forms of racial capitalism (Dieng, 2024).…”
Section: This Project: Agrarian Change and Its Social Reproductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, if the lens of social reproduction provides exciting new avenues to reclaim a more inclusive history of capitalism as a whole, it must also offer a chance to review key debates in the political economy of agrarian change. A growing set of studies grappling with 'decolonising' and decentring social reproduction approaches by focusing on the Global South and/or informal work have also focused on agrarian systems (e.g., Baglioni, 2022;Cousins et al, 2018;Fernandez, 2018;Hornby & Cousins, 2019;Rao & Ramnarain, 2023;Stevano, 2019). Others have highlighted the embeddedness of agrarian labour regimes in 'reproduction zones' (e.g., Pattenden, 2018) or, more recently, their interconnections with varied forms of racial capitalism (Dieng, 2024).…”
Section: This Project: Agrarian Change and Its Social Reproductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unfair (advantageous) bargaining power is an outcome of the complex interplay between class, gender, race/caste and other social identities. It is also tied to the prevailing socio‐economic, political and cultural order (Rao & Ramnarain, 2023). As Folbre (2020) noted, ‘groups that gain institutional advantage—whether by legitimate or illegitimate means—can lock in claims to a larger share of the gains from cooperation, which, in turn, reinforce their collective power over social institutions’ (p. 459).…”
Section: Rethinking Concepts Of ‘Value’ and ‘Exploitation’mentioning
confidence: 99%