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Negotiated Empowerment: Gender, Mobility, and System Design in Women’s Workforce Transitions in South India
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1  Urban Ethnographers, Bengaluru, 560104, India.
Academic Editor: Pan Wang

Abstract:

Women’s entry into paid work in India unfolds within dense social arrangements that regulate mobility, time, financial control, and moral legitimacy. Drawing on midline qualitative data from a three-year tracer study across urban Bengaluru and industrial Hosur, this paper examines how women in vocational skilling programmes transition from training into early employment, and how institutional systems interact with gendered household structures to shape that transition.

The study is based on three focus group discussions and 30 in-depth interviews conducted in Kannada, Tamil, and Malayalam with women aged 18–40 engaged in beauty therapy, tailoring, data entry, and factory manufacturing. Using an ethnographic lens, the paper centres women’s narratives of negotiation rather than treating empowerment as a linear outcome.

Findings show clear psychosocial shifts between baseline and midline: stronger self-articulation, emerging entrepreneurial aspirations, and greater financial awareness. Peer networks function as informal infrastructure, enabling skill practice, emotional support, and shared mobility strategies. In industrial Hosur, structured systems such as company transport and buddy support significantly eased adaptation and reduced early dropout risk.

Yet structural constraints remain stable. Household permission hierarchies, gendered care burdens, mobility restrictions, and segmented financial authority continue to define the boundaries of participation. Digital financial tools are widely used but not fully understood, producing partial inclusion without autonomy. Empowerment therefore appears as a negotiated and relational process rather than a binary shift.

The paper argues that training acts as a first anchor of autonomy, but durable workforce participation depends on reducing everyday friction: predictable transport, structured workplace integration, and sustained financial handholding. Rather than asking whether skilling “works,” this study examines how empowerment unfolds under constraint and what institutional designs expand women’s feasible choices in contemporary South India.

Keywords: Women’s workforce participation; Gender norms; Vocational skilling; Mobility and safety; Peer networks; Digital financial literacy; Migration and factory labour; Negotiated empowerment; Global South labour markets; Institutional design and inclusion.

 
 
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