Iran is estimated to have the third largest informal sector in the MENA region a major source of income for many low-income households whose numbers are growing as sanctions tighten. Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran provides insight into the role of informal networks in employment creation in Iran from a gender perspective. Drawing upon theories of social capital, social network, and the postcolonial feminist critique of mainstream development, this analysis sheds light on the ways in which poverty and unemployment may be tackled.Introduction 1. Social Capital, Social Net Work and Micro Enterprise 2. Women and the Informal Economy: A Literature Review 3. Women's Employment in Iran: An Overview 4. Gender and Informal Economy in Iran: A Review of Previous work 5. Field Work: Female Workers 6. Field Work: Male Workers: Comparing the Two Sample (Male with Female) Conclusion
Dr. Bahramitash's book is skillful, exceptionally intelligent, well-thought through, clear, and graceful. Her commitment to social justice and connecting community level analysis to the larger global context is commendable. Bahramitash meticulously studies the informal economy in Iran and skillfully brings the gender dimension to her analysis. She gives a voice to women who are leaders, care givers, care takers and financial contributors to their families and communities but yet are invisible, un-acknowledged, and under-valued. She combines the unique skills of a sophisticated theoretical thinker with the multi-level techniques of a participant observer and a social scientist. - Elhum Haghighat, Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Political Science, Lehman College, City University of New York, USA
Bahramitash's unique field research among working women in Iran provides invaluable insights into the role of low-income women who work as entrepreneurs in the large informal sector of Tehran and other major cities. The data challenges fundamental stereotypes about wlÃ*