1st Edition

Women, Education, and Development in Asia Cross-National Perspectives

Edited By Grace C.L. Mak Copyright 1996

    This volume of twelve original essays examines the interplay between women's education and development, and if and how it has changed women's status, in selected nations in Asia.
    Educational expansion in recent decades have benefitted women in Asia at least in quantitative terms. Industrialization has also created room for increased waged employment for them. However, the relative openness of these systems has not been paralleled at the cultural level. Women in Asia, which remains largely patriarchal, are thus caught in contradictions. This volume examines how women use and compromise with opportunities and limits in education, the role of education in their economic participation, and the enhancement and tension brought to their family roles.
    The volume is edited from a cross-national perspective. The chapters, each covering a nation, rest on a common framework. Each begins with a brief historical account of education fore women. It then investigates the extent women have been able to take advantage of them. What follows is an analysis of how women use their education in the labor market and in the family. Society's definition of women's roles in the family often acts to reduce the effect of schooling on women's economic participation. This interplay is further complicated by such factors as social class and/or caste, religion and ethnicity.

    Part I East Asia; Chapter 1 The People’s Republic of China, Grace C. L. Mak; Chapter 2 Japan, Machiko Matsui; Chapter 3 South Korea, Oksoon Kim; Chapter 4 Taiwan, Republic of China, Hsiao-chin Hsieh; Part II Southeast Asia; Chapter 5 Indonesia, Mayling Oey-Gardiner, Riga-Adiwoso Suprapto; Chapter 6 Malaysia, Robiah Sidin; Chapter 7 Singapore, Guat Tin Low; Part III South Asia; Chapter 8 India, Ratna Ghosh, Abdulaziz Talbani; Chapter 9 Pakistan, Kowsar P. Chowdbury; Chapter 10 Sri Lanka, Swarna Jayaweera;

    Biography

    Grace C. L. Mak, ,

    "The book does a great job mapping out the complex interrelationship of development, education, and impacts on women's life in Asia. The book is rich in information and the writing are clear and well organized. It can make a good introductory book on gender issues in developing countries, or a textbook on women and education from a cross-national perspective." -- Education Review
    "Presents a timely, multidimensional, and international discussion about what it means for women's daily lives to say that they are no longer invisible within nor peripheral to economic analysis and development policy and practice." -- Comparative Education Review