2022 Week 4 -Supriya Garikipati
strong>Readings:
Garikipati, S., Johnson, S., Guérin, I., & Szafarz, A. (2017). Microfinance and gender: Issues, challenges and the road ahead. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 641-648.
Kabeer, N. (2017). Economic pathways to women’s empowerment and active citizenship: what does the evidence from Bangladesh tell us?. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 649-663.
Duvendack, M., & Palmer-Jones, R. (2017). Micro-finance, women’s empowerment and fertility decline in Bangladesh: How important was women’s agency?. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 664-683.
Bali Swain, R., & Wallentin, F. Y. (2017). The impact of microfinance on factors empowering women: Differences in regional and delivery mechanisms in India’s SHG programme. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 684-699.
Garikipati, S., Agier, I., Guérin, I., & Szafarz, A. (2017). The cost of empowerment: multiple sources of women’s debt in rural India. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 700-722.
Corsi, M., & De Angelis, M. (2017). Gender discrimination in microfinance? Some evidence from Uganda. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 723-740.
Guerin, I., & Kumar, S. (2017). Market, freedom and the illusions of microcredit. Patronage, caste, class and patriarchy in rural South India. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 741-754.
Johnson, S. (2017). ‘We don’t have this is mine and this is his’: Managing money and the character of conjugality in Kenya. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(5), 755-768.
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