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Edited by Richard Lobban This collection examines the "invisible" women of the Middle East and their vital economic activities. Focusing on daily and domestic life in communities where more than half the population lives and works, these essays highlight the struggles and hardships of women in the region and also establish the distance between this invisible world and the conflict over Islamic issues that dominate headlines in the West. Indeed, as these essays illustrate, from the perspective of this invisible population, Islam appears variegated and tempered by cultural, historical, and gender circumstances. This work also documents the general emergence of the female-centered informal economy from the shadows toward a central role in the lives of Middle Eastern women in their respective nations. Part I. Strategies for Survival: Women at the Margins Nubian Women and the Shadow Economy, by Anne M. Jennings Baggara Women as Market Strategists, by Barbara J. Michael Invisible Survivors: Women and Diversity in the Transitional Economy of Yemen, by Delores M. Walters The Invisible Economy, Survival and Empowerment: Five Cases from Atbara, Sudan, by Nada Mustafa M. Ali Part II. Women and Work: The Invisible Economy of Egypt Urban Egyptian Women in the Informal Health Care Sector, by Marcia C. Inhorn Nest Eggs of Gold and Beans: Baladi Egyptian Women's Invisible Capital, by Evelyn A. Early Women, Work, and the Informal Economy in Rural Egypt, by Barbara K. Larson Women and Home-Based Microenterprises, by Marie Butler Part III. Methods and Measures: The Invisible Economy of Tunisia "Invisible" Work, Work "at Home," and the Condition of Women in Tunisia, by Sophie Ferchiou Women in the Invisible Economy in Tunis, by Richard A. Lobban, Jr. The Invisible Economy at the Edges of the Medina of Tunis, by Isabelle Berry-Chikhaoui Part IV. Locations and Linkages in the Invisible Economy Marcel, Straddling Visible and Invisible Lebanese Economies, by Suad Joseph Women in Cairo's (In)visible Economy: Linking Local and National Trends, by Homa Hoodfar Engaging Informality:
Women, Work, and Politics in Cairo, by Diane Singerman Richard Lobban is professor of anthropology and African studies at Rhode Island College. His most recent three books are on the history, culture, and politics of the Cape Verde Islands and Guinea-Bissau. 1998. 416 pp. 6 X 9. 23 b&w photos, 24 tables, notes, index. ISBN 0-8130-1577-4 Cloth, $55.00
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"Useful for its examination of women individually and in groups at work in regions that have not been the subject of extensive discussion of this type."--Choice "In producing a volume on the role of women in informal economic activities in the Middle East, Richard A. Lobban has provided a great service. . . . There is much to be learned from this book."--
Journal of Developing Areas "These essays show women working in diverse ways: as sellers of butter and vegetables in markets; as midwives and fertility experts; as tour guides and textile workers; as cooks and garden weeders. In addition to examining the labor roles of Middle Eastern and North African women in the "invisible economy," these essays assess the importance of women's income for family, if not national, economies."
--African Studies Review "A fascinating collection giving all sorts of insights into womens lives in various Middle Eastern communities."--Arlene E. MacLeod, Bates College
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