1st Edition

Women and Work in Indonesia

Edited By Michele Ford, Lyn Parker Copyright 2008
232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

This book examines the meaning of work for women in contemporary Indonesia. It takes a broad definition of work in order to interrogate assumptions about work and economic activity, focusing on what women themselves see as their work, which includes not only paid employment, home life and child care, but also activities surrounding ritual, healing and religious life. It analyses the key issues,... Read more

Introduction: Thinking About Indonesian Women and Work  Michele Ford and Lyn Parker  1. Not your Average Housewife: Minangkabau Women Rice Farmers in West Sumatra Evelyn Blackwood  2. Keeping Rice in the Pot: Women and Work in a Transmigration Settlement Gaynor Dawson  3. Dukun and Bidan: The Work of Traditional and Government Midwives in Southeast Sulawesi Simone Alesich  4. Poverty, Opportunity and Purity in Paradise: Women Working in Lombok’s Tourist Hotels Linda Rae Bennett  5. Industrial Workers in Transition: Women’s Experiences of Factory Work in Tangerang  Nicholaas Warouw  6. Bodies in Contest: Gender Difference and Equity in a Coal Mine Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt and Kathryn Robinson  7. Meanings of Work for Female Media and Communication Workers Pam Nilan and Prahastiwi Utari  8. Makkunrai Passimokolo’: Bugis Migrant Women Workers in Malaysia  Nurul Ilmi Idrus  9. Making the Best of What You’ve Got: Sex Work and Class Mobility in the Riau Islands Michele Ford and Lenore Lyons  10. Straddling Worlds: Indonesian Migrant Domestic Workers in Singapore Rosslyn von der Borch

Biography

Michele Ford chairs the Department of Indonesian Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia, where she teaches Indonesian language and Asian Studies. Her research focuses on the Indonesian labour movement, labour migration in Southeast Asia, and women and work.

Lyn Parker is Associate Professor in Asian Studies at the University of Western Australia. She teaches Asian Studies and Anthropology, Indonesian and Women’s Studies. Her main research interests are gender relations in Indonesia and Asia, the anthropology of women and the nation-state, education and health.