Impact of women’s home-based enterprise on family dynamics: evidence from Jordan

Development and Learning in Organizations

ISSN: 1477-7282

Article publication date: 15 February 2011

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Citation

Al-Dajani, H. (2011), "Impact of women’s home-based enterprise on family dynamics: evidence from Jordan", Development and Learning in Organizations, Vol. 25 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/dlo.2011.08125bad.009

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Impact of women’s home-based enterprise on family dynamics: evidence from Jordan

Article Type: Abstracts From: Development and Learning in Organizations, Volume 25, Issue 2

Al-Dajani H. and Marlow S.International Small Business Journal, October 2010, Vol. 28 No. 5, Start page: 470, No. of pages: 17

Within developing and disadvantaged economies, women’s self-employment has been identified as a tool to assist in alleviating poverty and empowering individual women. To explore these arguments, this article considers the experiences of Palestinian women who operate home-based enterprises within conservative patriarchal families. Empirically, we drew upon a study of 43 home-based female embroiderers, all members of the “1967 displaced Palestinian community,” now living in Amman, Jordan. From the evidence, it emerges that although these women make a critical contribution to family incomes, their entrepreneurial activities are constructed around the preservation of the traditional family form, such that while some degree of empowerment is attained, challenges to embedded patriarchy are limited.Article type: Research paperISSN: 0266-2426

Keywords: Family dynamics, Home-based enterprise, Middle East region, Women

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