Contents
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The Context: Economic Liberalization The Context: Economic Liberalization
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Neoliberal Expansion and the Development of Women's Work Neoliberal Expansion and the Development of Women's Work
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Islamic Ethics and the Spirit of Economic Development Islamic Ethics and the Spirit of Economic Development
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Women's Work as the "Entryway to Total Development" Women's Work as the "Entryway to Total Development"
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Empire of the Working Women Empire of the Working Women
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Conclusion: The Work of Motherhood Conclusion: The Work of Motherhood
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5 The Islamic Homeland: Iman Mustafa on Women's Work
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Published:May 2015
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Abstract
This chapter traces the proliferation of debates over women's work—tangled dialectics among development experts, feminists, academics, politicians, Marxists, Azharis, Islamists, and journalists like Iman Muhammad Mustafa. Mustafa charts a specific chronological timeline of these debates, from 1974 to 1989, a period of intense economic and political liberalization in Egypt. In 1989, in the midst of economic crisis and Egypt's contentious negotiations with the International Monetary Fund, Mustafa published a ten-part series of articles in the mainstream economic journal al-Ahram al-Iqtisadi criticizing “the working woman.” The articles identified women as a great, untapped resource of human capital in Egypt. Using the statistics, charts, arguments, and language of development reports, Mustafa critiqued Western, secular, feminist valorization of remunerated labor through a celebration of the economic and social worth of women's work in the household economy.
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