Why gender matters in economics / Mukesh Eswaran.
Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2014Description: xii, 392 pages ; 26 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780691121734
- 305.4 23
- HQ1381 .E89 2014
- BUS069000 | SOC028000
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | HQ1381 .E89 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001353753 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
HQ1237.5 .U6 R58 2007 Selling anxiety : how the news media scare women / | HQ1240 .J35 2005 Women, development, and the UN : a sixty-year quest for equality and justice / | HQ1240 .U5 2011 In pursuit of justice / | HQ1381 .E89 2014 Why gender matters in economics / | HQ1381 .J69 2007 Women, marriage, and wealth : the impact of marital status on the economic well-being of women through the life course / | HQ1391 .U5 F35 2008 Women for president : media bias in eight campaigns / | HQ1391 .U5 G88 2006 Paving the way for Madam President / |
Includes index.
"Gender matters in economics--for even with today's technology, fertility choices, market opportunities, and improved social norms, economic outcomes for women remain markedly worse than for men. Drawing on insights from feminism, postmodernism, psychology, evolutionary biology, Marxism, and politics, this textbook provides a rigorous economic look at issues confronting women throughout the world--including nonmarket scenarios, such as marriage, family, fertility choice, and bargaining within households, as well as market areas, like those pertaining to labor and credit markets and globalization.Mukesh Eswaran examines how women's behavioral responses in economic situations and their bargaining power within the household differ from those of men. Eswaran then delves into the far-reaching consequences of these differences, in market and nonmarket domains. The author considers how women may be discriminated against in labor and credit markets, how their family and market circumstances interact, and how globalization has influenced their lives. Eswaran also investigates how women have been empowered through access to education, credit, healthcare, and birth control; changes in ownership laws; the acquisition of suffrage; and political representation. Throughout, Eswaran applies sound economic analysis and new modeling approaches, and each chapter concludes with exercises and discussion questions.This textbook gives readers the necessary tools for thinking about gender from an economic perspective. Addresses economic issues for women throughout the world, in both developed and developing countries Looks at both market and nonmarket domains Requires only a background in basic economic principles Includes the most recent research on the economics of gender in a range of areas Concludes each chapter with exercises and discussion questions "-- Provided by publisher.
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