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<strong>SESSION</strong> <strong>GUIDE</strong>: <strong>IAFFE</strong> <strong>2011</strong> <strong>ANNUAL</strong> <strong>CONFERENCE</strong>, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>-26, <strong>2011</strong>HANGZHOU, CHINAFriday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 1:30 to 3:10Session A Roundtable on Gender, the Care Economy, and Public Policy*1Moderator: Xiao-ying Zheng, Peking UniversityBohong Liu, Women's Studies Institute of ChinaSusan Himmelweit, Open UniversityIndira Hirway, Centre for Development AlternativesHuiying Li, China Central Party SchoolWei Liu, China Statistical Bureau* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession2Time Use and the Study of Gender - North and SouthChair: Michael Bittman, University of New EnglandTime Poverty: A Contributor to Women’s Poverty?Omar Abdourahman, UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)Exploring the Policy Link: Time-Use Surveys as Tools for Sectoral PolicyMasaya Llavaneras Blanco, Universidad Central de VenezuelaGender, Time Use, and StressWilliam Michelson, University of TorontoSession3Gender, Migration, and Land in China*Chair: Namizata Binate Fofana, University of Cocody, AbidjanAnalysis of Training and Training Needs for Migrant Women in ChinaYan Zhang, Chinese Academy of Social ScienceGender, Socioeconomic Differences, and Migrants’ Land Rights: A Case Study in Rural NorthernLiaoningGale Summerfield and Junjie Chen, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignLabor Migration and Time-Use Patterns of the Left-Behind Children and Elderly in Rural ChinaHongqin Chang, Taiyuan University of Technology; Xiao-yuan Dong, University of Winnipeg; andFiona MacPhail, University of Northern British ColumbiaMother’s Employment and Childcare Choices of Migrant Families: Evidence from BeijingYuanhui Na, Advanced Training Center/Management School of the State Grid* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation1 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 1:30 to 3:10 ContinuedSession Sexuality and the State4Chair: Karin Schoenpflug, Institute of Higher Studies, ViennaSexing Economy: Gender and Desire Between Labor/Exploitation and Consumption/ChoiceS. Charusheela, University of Washington, BothellThe United Nations and the Postwar HeteronormColin Danby, University of Washington, BothellBody Blues: Representations of Dalit Male Bodies in Colonial IndiaCharu Gupta, Delhi UniversityLGB Data Project EuropeKarin Schoenpflug, Institute for Higher Studies, ViennaSession5Gender and Intergenerational Transfers*Chair: Ellen Mutari, Richard Stockton College of New JerseyIntra-Household Competition for Care: The Role of Bequest-regulating Social NormsElisabetta Magnani, University of New South Wales and Anu Rammohan, University of SydneyWho Cares for Parents in Need? Evidence from ChinaXinxin Chen, Zhejiang Gongshang University and Yaohui Zhao, Peking UniversityIntergenerational Mobility of Education in China Based on the Perspective of Gender DifferencesPingping Gu, Zhejiang Gongshang UniversityRetirement Decisions: Evidence on Gender EffectsPeng Zhou, Macquarie University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession6Gender Wage Gaps and DiscriminationChair: Linda Lucas, University of South FloridaDeterminants of Women Garment Workers' Wages - A Case Study of NepalYumiko Yamamoto, UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional Centre and Mona Adhikari, University ofWarwickNew Estimator for Wage Discrimination Between Two GroupsJiqiang Guo, Lili Lu, and Li Jiang, Zhejiang UniversityGender Wage Gaps in Argentina and How Collective Agreements Could Reduce ThemLucia Tumini and Sofia Rojo Brizuela, Empleo y Segurida SocialCausal Effects of Occupational Gender Segregation on WagesJenny Clarhäll, University of Oslo2 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 1:30 to 3:10 ContinuedSession Gender, Land Tenure, and Land Policy7Chair: Bina Agarwal, Delhi UniversityImpact of the Malagasy Land Tenure Reform on Women’s Access to Secure Land RightsMarit Widman, Swedish University of Agricultural ScienceGendered Patterns of Land Ownership: A Case Study of Kanchanaburi Province, ThailandMalee Sunpuwan, Mahidol UniversityExamining Women’s Engagement with Land Structures at Local Government Level: A Case of MukonoDistrictJackline Kirungi, Makerere UniversityNational Land Policy and Small Scale Farmers’ (SSFs) Land Rights in Nakasongola DistrictJudith Ikiring, Send a Cow UgandaSession8Financial, Social, and Human CapitalChair: Yunxian Wang, Shanghai Academy of Social SciencesBeing Patient with Microfinance: The Impact of Training on Indian Self-Help GroupsRanjula Bali Swain, Uppsala University and Adel Varghese, Texas A&M UniversityEffect of Nutritional Enhancement Programs on Primary-School Students in Poverty-Stricken Areas ofChinaLiangshu Qi, Tsinghua UniversityParticipation in Social Insurance Programs: A Gender Perspective from the Mauritian ContextTaruna Ramessur, University of Mauritius, MauritiusConditional Cash Transfer Programs and Gender Equity: Are They an Advance or a Setback for LatinAmerican Women?Corina Rodríguez-Enríquez, Conicet-Ciepp3 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 1:30 to 3:10 ContinuedSession Impacts of the Global Economic Crisis*9Chair: Sasini Kulatunga, University of ColomboWho Pays for the Crisis in Eastern European “New Capitalism”? The Case of PolandMaria Skora, Wroclaw University of EconomicsImpact of the Global Economic Crisis on Women in the Non-Profit Sector: The Case of Paid andUnpaid AIDS Care WorkOlagoke Akintola, University of KwaZulu-NatalFinancial Crises and Its Impact on the U.S. Labor Market: A Gender PerspectiveFahima Aziz, Hamline UniversityGlobal Economic Crisis, Gender, and Employment: The Impact and Policy ResponseNaoko Otobe, International Labor Organization* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationFriday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 3:30 to 5:10Session Roundtable: Enhancing <strong>IAFFE</strong>'s Vision in the 21st Century1Moderator: V. Eudine Barriteau, University of the West IndiesRadhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers UniversityCorina Rodríguez-Enríquez, Conicet-CieppM.V. Lee Badgett, University of Massachusetts at AmherstMartha MacDonald, Saint Mary's UniversitySession2Gender Inequality and Post-Secondary Education*Chair: Xinxin Chen, Zhejiang Gongshang UniversityProgress Toward Closing the Gender Gap in STEM Education: A Comparison of Degrees Awarded inScience, Technology, Engineering and Math by Gender in the US and ChinaCarol Frances, Claremont Graduate UniversityOn Female Discrimination in the Chinese Job MarketGuoAn Wang and Shanshan Chang, Zhejiang Gongshang University and Lijun Hu, QuzhouUniversityCommunity College Pathways to STEM Education for Women: A Challenge to Gender Stereotypes?Lois Joy, Education Development CenterFrom the Perspective of Gender Human ResourcesZhenhui Qu, Hunan Women’s University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation4 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 3:30 to 5:10 ContinuedSession Informal Employment in Asia*3Chair: Lourdes Benería, Cornell UniversityGender, Selectivity, and the Rise of Informal Employment in Urban ChinaNi Yuan, China Youth University for Political Science and Sarah Cook, UNRISDInformal Sector Gender Wage Gaps: A Longitudinal Analysis for the Korean Labor MarketDonghun Cho, Hallym University and Joonmo Cho, Sungkyunkwan UniversityDeterminants of Women’s Work in Rural India: Links between Agrarian Distress and Feminization ofLow-Productivity EmploymentSona Mitra, National Institute of Public Finance and PolicyTransactions-Cost Approach to Brothel-Based Sex Work: Case of GB Road, New DelhiNeha Hui, Durbar Mahila Samanvaya Committee, India* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession4Gender, Culture, and InstitutionsChair: Juanwen Yuan, Guizhou College of Finance and EconomicsLabor Institutions Around the World: Theoretical and Empirical Elements on Diversity Beyond theVarieties of CapitalismEla Callorda Fossati, University of BordeauxIs There Any Difference among Muslim States in their Impact on Gender Inequality in the LaborMarket?Isin Ertugrul Yilmazer, Uludag UniversityWhy Do Women Care What Men Think? The Role of Spousal Support in Job Satisfaction AmongstNurses in South AfricaSarojini Naidoo and Cynthia Patel, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South AfricaSession5Gender, the Global Financial Crisis, and Policy ResponsesChair: Diana Alarcón, UN DESAFeminist Solutions to Man-Made Crises: Building Synergy Between Feminist Economics and Women'sActivismYuan Feng, Jing-jin Facilitator's Group for GADImplications of the Global Financial Crisis for AsiaGhulam Khoso, University of SindhWould Women Leaders Have Prevented the Global Financial Crisis?Julie Nelson, University of Massachusetts, Boston5 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 3:30 to 5:10 ContinuedSession Gender and Public Policy6Chair: Tae Hee Hong, Chosun UniversityInvestment Climate Reform for Women Entrepreneurs in South Asia: Issues and MethodsMeena Acharya, Tanka Prasad Acharya Memorial FoundationGender-Sensitive Public Policies: Between Aspirations and Realities in the European UnionDiane Perron and Ania Plomien, London School of EconomicsPolicy Pathway to Gender-Responsive Budgeting in JapanYasuko Muramatsu, Tokyo Woman's Christian UniversityHow to Address the Gender Impact of Trade: The Action Research Practice in ChinaPin Lu, Gender and Development Network in ChinaSession7Employment Policies and Women's WorkChair: Shaianne Osterreich, Ithaca CollegeEmployment Guarantee: A Critical Component of Full-Employment Strategy in Developing CountriesIndira Hirway, Centre for Development AlternativesEmployment Guarantee and Women's Empowerment in Rural India: Assessing Institutional andGovernance NeedsAmrita Chatterjee, South Asian Forum for EnvironmentWomen and Work in the Ugandan Macroeconomy: A Structural and Legislative AnalysisLinda Lucas, University of South Florida and Consolata Kabonesa, Makerere UniversityWomen's Employment and Wages in Europe: Does Parental Leave Matter?Nora Reich, Hamburg Institute of International Economics6 | P age


Friday, <strong>June</strong> <strong>24</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, 3:30 to 5:10 ContinuedSession Migration and Marriage*8Chair: Tahreer Araj, University of IllinoisThe Impact of Migration on Marital Instability: Evidence from ChinaFenglian Du, Inner Mongolia UniversityOn Gender Issues Relative to Asian Marriage Migrants - Comparative Research Between Cases inJapan and TaiwanHongfang Hao, Kyoto UniversityDevelopment, Marriage, and Migration: Understanding the Dynamics of Filipina Marriage Migrants’Agency in Aotearoa, New ZealandEunica Anna Aure, Victoria University of WellingtonSolution for the Care Crisis: Marriage Migration vs. Labor Migration?Hyunok Lee, Cornell University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession9Welfare Regimes and Care PoliciesChair: Roujman Shahbazian, Lund UniversityThe Effects of Policies of Different Welfare Regimes on Intra-Household InequalitiesSusan Himmelweit, Jerome De Henau, Cristina Santos, and Zeenat Soobedar, Open UniversityReconfiguring the Male Breadwinner Gender Regime: Workplace and Industrial Relations Policies inAustralia under Julia Gillard’s Labor GovernmentRhonda Sharp, University of South Australia and Ray Broomhill, University of AdelaideHousehold Work-Family Balance Strategies and Gendered Time In/equity in AustraliaLyn Craig and Abigail Powell, University of New South WalesCare Policies, An Important Example of Gender-Sensitive Public Policies: The Case of SpanishDependent LawPaula Rodriguez-Modrono, Lina Galvez-Muñez, Mauricio Matus-Lopez, and Monica Dominguez-Serrano, University Pablo de Olavide7 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 9:00 – 10:40Session Roundtable on <strong>IAFFE</strong> and the Chinese Women's Network: Research Mentoring1 and Policy Advocacy*Moderator: Sarah Cook, UNRISDXiao-yuan Dong, University of WinnipegKathleen Hartford, Ford FoundationStephanie Seguino, University of VermontDiana Strassmann, Rice UniversityYaohui Zhao, Peking UniversityXiaoyun Liu, China Agricultural University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession2Historical Perspectives on Gender and EconomicsChair: Colin Danby, University of Washington, BothellThe Gender Order in Oligarchic Argentina (1880-1930)Silvia Berger, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO) ArgentinaBiography of Virginia Penny, an Early American Feminist EconomistSusan Gensemer, Syracuse UniversityThe Unpaid Labor of Houston’s Early Chinese American Immigrant WomenAnne Chao, Rice UniversityThe Private is Political (Economy)!Carlo D'Ippoliti, Sapienza University of Rome8 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 9:00 – 10:40 ContinuedSession Roundtable on Sexuality and the Economy3Moderator: Susie Jolly, Ford FoundationAkua Britwum, University of Cape CoastAnne Marie Kristine Lim, GALANG (Philippines)M.V. Lee Badgett, University of Massachusetts, AmherstSession4Migration Experiences of WomenChair: Aldo Caliari, Center of ConcernMigration and Domestic Work: The Case of Latin American Women in CataluñaAlejandra M Sotomayor, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana-IztapInternational Migration: A Case of Chinese Immigrant Women in IrelandJun Ni, Dublin City University, IrelandMother’s Land and Others’ Land: ‘Stolen’ Youth of Returned Female MigrantsAKM Ullah, Centre for Migration and Refugee StudiesVictims of Human Trafficking in Sri Lanka: Narratives of Women, Children, and YouthKopalapillai Amirthalingam, Danesh Jayatilaka, Rajith W. D. Lakshman and Nishadi Liyanage,University of ColomboSession5Mobility as a Survival Strategy I*Chair: Taruna Ramessur, University of MauritiusMobility as Strategies for Survival: Case of Ethnic Groups in Northern LaosKyoko Kusakabe, Asian Institute of TechnologyMigration within the Soligas Community as a Livelihood Coping Strategy and its Gender ImplicationsAnitha Venkatesh, Asian Institute of TechnologyGendered Mobility of Ethnic Groups in the Economic Expansion in Yunnan, ChinaYunxian Wang, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences and Zhao Qun, Yunnan Academy of SocialSciencesMobility of Tribal Populations for Livelihoods Sustenance: A Gender Perspective from Odisha, IndiaSmita Mishra Panda, Human Development FoundationGendered Mobility and Livelihoods of Indigenous People: The Case of the Veddas in Sri LankaRagnhild Lund, Norwegian University of Science and Technology* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation9 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 9:00 – 10:40 ContinuedSession Gender and Livelihoods6Chair: Hongqin Chang, Taiyuan University of TechnologyGendered Impact of Rural Livelihood Development Interventions - A Case Study from Sri Lankathrough a Longitudinal LensManeka Jayasinghe, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and Rajith Lakshman University ofColomboConceptualizing Women's Work: The Cultural Economy of WeavingMaria Helen Dayo, University of the Philippines Los BanosA Characterization of Horticultural Households from a Gender Perspective: Elaborative Description ofDataAïfa Ndoye Niane, Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rural (IPAR)Session7Macroeconomics and Well-Being*Chair: Barbara Hopkins, Wright State UniversityGender as a Macroeconomic VariableIrene van Staveren, Institute for Social Studies, The HagueNeoliberal Development Macroeconomics: A Consideration of its Gendered Employment EffectsElissa Braunstein, Colorado State UniversityFiscal and Monetary Policy and Human Rights in the USRadhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers UniversityEmployment of Women: An Issue of Capability DevelopmentKrishna Kant Jha, C. M. College* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation10 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 9:00 – 10:40 ContinuedSession Patterns of Caregiving*8Chair: Alicia Girón, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM)Ethno-Religious Effects on Hui Nationality Female Members' Socialization ProcessShan Shan, Renmin University of ChinaNotes on the Dynamics of Households, Care Services, and Feminist EconomicsVivianne Ventura-Dias, Latin American Trade Network (LATN)Global Care Chains and Implications for the Exercise of the Rights of Nicaraguan Migrant WomenRebeca Centeno Orozco, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el DesarrolloDomestic Service and Social Organization of Care in Chile: Continuity and ChangeRosalba Todaro, Centro de Estudios de la Mujer* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession9Roundtable on the Post-Global Economic Crisis: Feminist Activists in the GlobalSouth Assess Impacts and Possible Action PathsModerator: Diane Elson, University of EssexYassine Fall, African Women's Millennium InitiativeDiane Elson, University of EssexDevaki Jain, The National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS)Lourdes Benería, Cornell University11 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 11:00 – 12:40Session A Panel Discussion on the World Bank World Development Report 2012*1Moderator: Caren Grown, USAIDCarolina Sanchez-Paromo, World BankAndrew Mason, World BankLuis Benveniste, World BankDiane Elson, University of EssexXiao-yuan Dong, University of WinnipegCorina Rodríguez-Enríquez, Conicet-Ciepp* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession2Indian Feminist Perspectives in the Aftermath of the Global Economic CrisisChair: Ilina Sen, MG International Hindi UniversityContesting Development Paradigms and Survival Struggles in Central IndiaIlina Sen, MG International Hindi UniversityLocating Ourselves DifferentlyDevaki Jain, National Institute of Advanced StudiesDalit Women in Alliance Politics in the Context of Changing Notions of Citizenship and EntitlementsMeera Velayudhan, Centre for Environment and Social ConcernsThe Femme Factor and the Poverty Issue in India - A Socio-Economic and Cultural PerspectiveMonica Das, Delhi UniversitySession3Gender and Development: Where Are We Now?Chair: Gunseli Berik, University of UtahGender, Globalization, Development: Theoretical FrameworksLourdes Benería, Cornell UniversityRevisiting Debates Around Gender and TradeGunseli Berik, University of UtahAnother Financial Crisis: Microcredits, the Financialization of Everyday Life and the Feminization ofIndebtedness in IndiaChrista Wichterich, Women in Development Europe (WIDE)12 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 11:00 – 12:40 ContinuedSession Mobility as a Survival Strategy II4Chair: Fenglian Du, Inner Mongolia UniversityMigration and Gender within Indigenous Communities in BangladeshFarida Khan, University of Wisconsin - ParksideLabor Migration and Mobility in Newfoundland, Canada: Social Transformation and Gender in ThreeRural AreasMartha MacDonald, Saint Mary's University, Peter Sinclair, Memorial University of Newfoundland,and Deatra Walsh, York UniversityGender Differential Migration and the AIDS EpidemicIlhan Ozen, Middle Eastern Technical UniversitySession5Time-Use Analyses*Chair: Ranjula Bali Swain, Uppsala UniversityParental Care and Married Women’s Labor Time Allocation in Rural ChinaLan Liu, Peking UniversityDegree of Substitutability in the Household Production Model: Evidence from Time-Use Data in EightCountriesMohammad Sepahvand, Uppsala University; Roujman Shahbazian, Lund University; and RanjulaBali Swain, Uppsala UniversityParent Time Investment in Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Childcare Activities: Evidence from Time-UseData in Five CountriesRoujman Shahbazian, Lund University; Mohammad Sepahvand, Uppsala University; and RanjulaBali Swain, Uppsala UniversityChanges in Parental Time: Korean Experiences in 1999-2009Jayoung Yoon, Korea Labor Institute* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation13 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 11:00 – 12:40 ContinuedSession Gender Analysis in the Formulation of Public Policies6Chair: Ragnhild Lund, Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyInformal Work and Social Expenditure Across Italian Regions: How To Exit Poverty Traps?Mita Marra, University of SalernoMaking Gender Budget Analysis work: A Case Study of the Japanese GovernmentReina Ichii, RMIT UniversityGovernance Reforms and Diverse Gender Identities in India: Moving Beyond Institutional TransplantsUlrike Mueller, Humboldt University BerlinGender Responsive Budgeting Process Index (GRBPI): A Methodology for Monitoring InstitutionalCapacity to Undertake Gender-Responsive BudgetingMargarita Ozonas Marcos, UN WomenSession7Reproductive Rights and Government Policy*Chair: Vivianne Ventura-Dias, Latin American Trade Network (LATN)“A Big, Big Sister with a Little, Little Brother”: Reproductive Politics and SocioeconomicDifferentiations in Post Socialist Rural ChinaJunjie Chen, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignThe Construction of Double Burden in Post-Mao China: Feminist Analysis of the “Children’s Project”Fumie Ohashi, JSPSChanges in the Determinants of the Implied Completed Fertility Rate: The Impact of the Introduction ofa Government Provided Baby BonusElisa Rose Birch, University of Western AustraliaEngendering the Theory of Market Socialism: The “Logic” of Market Incentives and Family PolicyBarbara Hopkins, Wright State University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation14 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 11:00 – 12:40 ContinuedSession Employment and Unpaid Care: Interrelated Outcomes*8Chair: Maria Helen Dayo, University of the Philippines Los BanosWomen's Employment and Children's Nutritional Status: New Evidence from AsiaYana van der Meulen Rodgers, Rutgers UniversityThe Dynamics of Work and Care in the Indian Information Technology Enabled Services (ITES) SectorElizabeth Hill, University of SydneyRethinking Social Policy and Costs of MotherhoodMichael Bittman, University of New EnglandWork-Related Health Problems among Couples with Child(ren) and Their Effects on Absenteeism - AGender-Based AnalysisCsilla Sebok, Hungarian Central Statistical Office* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession9New Thinking in Feminist Economics IChair: Diana StrassmannThe Food Security Problem of Africa: Some Multi-Dimensional Issues and Gender-Aware PolicyThrustsTomilayo Adekanye, Babcock University; Akin Daniel Babalola, Babcock University; and Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, NigeriaDiscussant: Irene van Staveren, Institute for Social Studies, The HagueReorienting the European Union Gender Architecture: Perspective from New Member CountriesEwa Ruminska-Zimny, Warsaw School of EconomicsDiscussant: Marjorie Griffin Cohen, Simon Fraser UniversityGender in Agricultural Technology Extension Policy in ChinaJuanwen Yuan, Guizhou College of Finance and EconomicsDiscussant: Gale Summerfield, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign15 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 2:20 – 4:00Session Gendered Segregation in Labor Markets1Chair: Indira Hirway, Centre for Development AlternativesGlobal Feminization? Industrial Upgrading, Sex Segmentation, and Manufacturing Employment inDeveloping CountriesSheba Tejani and Will Milberg, New School for Social ResearchIndonesian Exports and Gender: Where is the Path to Decent Work?Shaianne Osterreich, Ithaca CollegeIndustrial Development and Gender Segregation: Evidence from ChinaJohanna Rickne, Uppsala UniversitySession2New Thinking in Feminist Economics IIChair: Gunseli Berik, University of UtahFeminist Action with Respect to Economic Theory, Policies and Institutions for Women Workers in theInformal Employment in the Post-Economic Crisis: Lessons Learned from IndonesiaHesti Wijaya, Brawijaya UniversityDiscussant: Elizabeth Hill, University of SydneyGlobal Financial Crisis and Women in an Oil Rich Economy: The Case of NigeriaRosemary Okoh and Patrick Okoh, Delta State University, NigeriaDiscussant: Antigone Lyberaki, Panteion University of Social and Political SciencesGlobal Economic Crisis, Labor Migration and Development: Latino Male and Female Migration in theUnited StatesMaria Consuelo Ahumada, Universidad JaverianaDiscussant: Elissa Braunstein, Colorado State University16 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 2:20 – 4:00 ContinuedSession New Feminist Thinking on the Environment*3Chair: Ewa Ruminska-Zimny, Warsaw School of EconomicsGender and Forest Conservation: Does Women's Presence Make a Difference?Bina Agarwal, University of New DelhiSocial Policy is Environmental Policy: Paid Work, Unpaid Care Work, Gender, and EcologyLynn Duggan, Indiana UniversityGender and Livelihood Diversification in a Socially Insecure and Environmentally-Challenged NigerDelta Region, NigeriaEkaete Udong, Wageningen University and Emem Inyang, University of Uyo* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession4Industry-Level Analyses of Gendered EmploymentChair: Ela Callorda Fossati, University of BordeauxFeminist Perspectives on the Realignment of Clothing Production’s Stronghold by JapaneseMultinational Corporations after the Global Financial Crisis: From a China Oriented Strategy to aChina Plus One StrategyHanako Nagata, Ochanomizu UniversityClassified Female Labor in Neo-liberal Economies: Status of Women Handcraft Workers in Fair TradeOrganizations of SAARC nationsDipayan Dey, South Asian Forum for EnvironmentGender, Institutions, Access to Finance and the Development of Small-Scale Enterprises in Kenya:Lessons for the Global Economic CrisisRosemary Atieno, University of NairobiEmployment in a Maturing Industry: The Impact of Cyclical and Secular Trends on Casino Job QualityEllen Mutari and Deb Figart, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey17 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 2:20 – 4:00 ContinuedSession Gender, Justice, and Macro-Level Policies5Chair: Linda Lucas, University of South FloridaFeminist Human Rights Approaches to Economic Policy: A Critical Analysis of the Work of the WorldCouncil of ChurchesPamela Brubaker, California Lutheran UniversityNew Zealand and its Pacific Island Neighbors: New Zealand's Clean, Green, Social Justice andWomen-Focused Image - Myth or Reality? Feminist and Ecological CritiquesPrue Hyman, Victoria University of Welllington, New ZealandFrom Numbers to Change: The Experience of Women’s Caucus in Parliament in East Timor inBringing about Gender-Sensitive Public FinanceMonica Costa, University of South AustraliaGender Perspective for a South-America Institutional and Public Spending CooperationEugenia Correa, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM)Session6Impact of Economic Change on Gender Relations and Equality*Chair: Monica Das, Delhi UniversityEconomic Development and Gender Relations in East AsiaTae Hee Hong, Chosun UniversityShadowed Memoirs: Gender and Production of Landscape in a Rural Kerala Region (India)T. S. Saju, Sree Sankaracharya UniversityComparing the Gender Gap Between Latin America and South East Asia During the SecondGlobalizationMaría Magdalena Camou and Silvana Maubrigades, Social Science UniversityGender Balancing through the Doctrine of Equity as Safety Net in Financial Crisis: An IndianPerspectiveVrajlal Sapovadia, Shanti Business School* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation18 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 2:20 – 4:00 ContinuedSession Roads to Empowerment*7Chair: Mita Marra, University of SalernoMicrofinance, Food Security, and Women's Empowerment in Côte d'IvoireNamizata Binate Fofana, University of Cocody, AbidjanDoes the Knowledge of Women about Their Rights to Vote Affect Their Propensity to Vote in VillageElections?Xiaopeng Pang and Junxia Zeng, Renmin University of China and Scott Rozelle, Stanford UniversityIt Pays to Ask: The Role of Negotiations on Gender Inequality in Labor Market InvolvementLei Lai, Tulane UniversitySen’s Capability Approach, Institutionalized Power, and EmpowermentLori Keleher, New Mexico State University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession8Women, Work, and Dowry in Contemporary IndiaChair: Eunica Anna Aure, Victoria University of WellingtonWomen’s Work Participation in India Since the 1990s: Some Theoretical and Empirical IssuesJyotirmoy Sircar, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New DelhiBorn To Marry: The Political Economy of Dowry in IndiaAbhilasha Srivastava, American UniversityUnraveling the Mysteries of Gender Issues in the Production of Scientific Knowledge in DevelopingCountries. The Case of ChileBernardita Escobar, Universidad Diego PortalesGlobalization and Casualization of Women’s Labor in IndiaMallaiah Lakkineni, Central University of Karnataka and Babasaheb Bhimrao, Ambedkar CentralUniversitySession9Roundtable: Feminist Critiques, Policy Alternatives and Calls for SystemicChange to an Economy in Crisis*Moderator: Natalie Raaber, Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID)Natalie Raaber, AWIDDiana Aguiar, AWIDNurgul Djanaeva, Forum of Women's NGOs of KyrgyzstanChrista Wichterich, Women in Development Europe (WIDE)Radhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translation19 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 4:20 – 6:00Session Gender and Paid Domestic Labor*1Chair: Lanyan Chen, Nipissing UniversityPaid Domestic Labour and Labour Standards in ChinaXinying Hu, Simon Fraser UniversityDomestic Workers' Access to Social Security in Shanghai: A Case StudyJufen Wang, Fudan UniversityDecent Work: Work Like Any Other, Work Like No OtherNelien Haspels, International Labor OrganizationAn Analysis of Domestic Workers Shortage in ChinaLihua Xie and Huimin Han, Cultural Development Centre for Rural Women* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession2Policy-Oriented Research in Gender Economics: Case Studies from thePhilippinesChair: Yumiko Yamamoto, UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional CentreGender and Disability: The Case of the PhilippinesAubrey Tabuga and Christian Mina, Philippines Institute for Development StudiesAdaptation to Climate Change: Implications for the Well-Being of Women and Their HouseholdsRuth Batani and Karryl Ngina, Institute of Social Research and DevelopmentMaking the Gender and Development (GAD) Budget Gender-Responsive at the LGU LevelNathalie Verceles, University of the PhilippinesImplications of Female Household Headship on Consumption Expenditure for Children's Welfare:Philippine CaseNatividad Bernardino, Miriam CollegeDiscussants:Nathalie Verceles, University of the PhilippinesMarina Durano, Universiti Sains, MalaysiaJosefa Francisco, Miriam CollegeYumiko Yamamoto, UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional Centre20 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 4:20 – 6:00 ContinuedSession Roundtable: Writing Scholarly Articles and Publishing in Feminist Economics*3Moderator: Yana van der Meulen Rodgers, Rutgers UniversityFeminist Economics Research is More than Regressions with a Gender Dummy VariableXiao-yuan Dong, University of WinnipegTurning Research into an ArticleGunseli Berik, University of UtahPreparing Papers for Submission to Feminist Economics and Other Scholarly JournalsDiana Strassmann, Rice UniversityReporting and Presenting Statistical Results in Feminist EconomicsYana van der Meulen Rodgers, Rutgers University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession4Roundtable: What Types of Work Can We Call Feminist Economics?Moderator: Elissa Braunstein, Colorado State UniversityRadhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers UniversityDiane Elson, University of EssexCaren Grown, American UniversityJames Heintz, University of Massachusetts-AmherstStephanie Seguino, University of VermontSession5Emerging Gender and Land Issues in AfricaChair: Aïfa Ndoye Niane, Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rural (IPAR)Call for New Theories: Ecological Economics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) to AnalyzeSustainable Food ProductionCarol Thompson, Northern Arizona UniversityUgandan Women in the Formal Land SectorAbby Sebina-Zziwa, Makerere UniversityThe Impact of Large-Scale Land Acquisitions on Family Farming and Food Security in Mali andSenegalJeanne Koopman, Boston UniversityWomen, Agriculture, and Sustainable Rural Development in NigeriaAndrew Onwuemele, Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research21 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 4:20 – 6:00 ContinuedSession Human and Social Capital*6Chair: Sheba Tejani, New School for Social ResearchDoes Health Insurance Improve Inequalities in Health Care Utilization in Rural China?Jin Feng and Fang Lui, Fudan UniversityA Gender Analysis of the Educational Status of the Left-Behind Children in Rural ChinaLiguiyan LiSocial Capital, Gender, and Income Inequality: Evidence from Rural ChinaTang Wei, Zhejiang Gongshang UniversityThe Working Mother in the Social Transformation (Unfinished)Yihong Jin, Nanjing Normal University* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession7Social and Physical Infrastructure and GenderChair: Silvia Berger, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO) ArgentinaDisaster-Induced Displacement and Gender: A Study on Four Villages in Weligama, Sri LankaRajith Lakshman and Shadeepa Vithanagama, University of ColomboThe Impact of Railroads on School Enrollment in Nineteenth Century AmericaElisabeth Perlman, Boston UniversityMothers’ Groups: Why are they Role Models in Conservation and Natural Resource Management?Prabhakar Shrestha, University of Nebraska-LincolnMainstreaming Gender Equality in Palestinian Cooperatives: Reality and ChallengesTahreer Araj, University of IllinoisSession8Assessments of Well-Being and FertilityChair: Jayoung Yoon, Korea Labor InstituteWomen’s Multiple-Partner Fertility in the United States: Prevalence, Correlates, and Trends, 1985-2008Siobhan Reilly, Mills CollegeAn Overview of Cambodian WomenParveen Shah, Area Study CentreSexual Violence and Female Employment in Sub-Saharan AfricaKade Finnoff, University of Massachusetts, BostonWomen’s Multipartnered Fertility and the U.S. Criminal Justice SystemEirik Evenhouse and Siobhan Reilly, Mills College22 | P age


Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 25, <strong>2011</strong>, 4:20 – 6:00 ContinuedSession Gender, Poverty, and Inequality9Chair: Hyunok Lee, Cornell UniversitySubjective Poverty through the Lenses of Gender and Ethnicity: The Case of Mardin, TurkeyUmmuhan Gokovali Medettin and Aysun Isik, Mugla UniversityIncome Mobility of Household in Poverty Areas: A Case of Poor Counties in Gansu Province, ChinaYu Min, Peking UniversityGender and the Transmission of Lifetime Inequality: An Empirical Analysis of Micro-Data fromDiverse “Worlds of Welfare Capitalism”Antigone Lyberaki, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences and Platon Tinios, Universityof PiraeusUnderstanding Inter-Group Economic Stratification: The Case of War Widow-Headed Households inEastern Sri LankaSasini Kulatunga, University of ColomboSunday, <strong>June</strong> 26, <strong>2011</strong>, 8:30 – 10:10Session Roundtable: Sexuality, AIDS, and the Economy*1Moderator: Lanyan Chen, Nipissing UniversityAkshay Khanna, Institute of Development StudiesHuso Yi, The Chinese University of Hong KongSusie Jolly, Ford FoundationOlagoke Akintola, University of KwaZulu-NatalJinling Wang, Institute of Sociology at the Academy of Social Sciences of Zhejiang* Session has simultaneous Chinese-English translationSession2Food Insecurity and NutritionChair: Kyoko Kusakabe, Asian Institute of Technology“Land Grabbing” in Constrained Environment: Do Women in Uganda Have Enough Space for FoodSecurity?Milly Tebusabwa, Council for Economic Empowerment for Women of Africa-UgandaPersistent Food Insecurity Among Women in the Wake of National Agricultural Advisory Services(NAADS) Programme: The Case of Bubara, Kabale District- UgandaHarriet Kebirungi, Kyambogo UniversityAgricultural Innovation for Food Security and Environmental Sustainability: Why a GenderPerspective?Diana Alarcón, UN DESAThe Role of Economic Status, Gender, and Race in Nutritional Deficiencies in U.S. Adults 2003-2008Yanan Di and Jayne Dean, Wagner College23 | P age


Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 26, <strong>2011</strong>, 8:30 – 10:10 ContinuedSession Activist Scholarship and its Contributions to Deliberative Democracy in Global3 Economic GovernanceChair: Marina Durano, Universiti Sains MalaysiaTrade-Finance Linkages: Networking and Advocacy for Alternative Responses to the Global CrisisAldo Caliari, Center of ConcernDAWN DDD and GEEJ Process: Mobilizing and Catalyzing Young Women Through Training andConsultationZo Randriamaro, DAWN and Marina Durano, Universiti Sains MalaysiaThe Use of Scholarship in Inter-Governmental Negotiations on Climate ChangeYoke Ling Chee, Third World NetworkDiscussants:Josefa Francisco, Miriam CollegeYumiko Yamamoto, UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional CentreSession4Economic and Environmental Crisis and Change: Gender-Aware ApproachesChair: S. Charusheela, University of Washington, BothellGender, Climate Change, and Labor in Developed CountriesMarjorie Cohen, Simon Fraser UniversityEmerging Features of Economic Downturn in an Oil-Rich Developing Country: Implications forGender Equity and the Fallacy of Economic Theories and PoliciesJanet Olusi, Obafemi Awolowo UniversityGender, Resource Allocation, and ProductivityFatimata Dia Sow, Senegalese Agricultural Research Institute (ISRA); Gerrit Antonides and AnkeNiehof, Wageningen UniversityResearch on Women's Economic Participation and Education Security Mechanism: Perspectives fromFeminismJing Shaoli, Nanjing Normal University<strong>24</strong> | P age


Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 26, <strong>2011</strong>, 8:30 – 10:10 ContinuedSession Care Work and Care Markets5Chair: Tomilayo Adekanye, Babcock UniversityOlder Women in Paid Care WorkSiobhan Austen and Erica Lewin, Curtin UniversityPoverty, Commercialization and the Segmentation of Urban Health Care Market: Challenges andLessons from TanzaniaTausi Kida, Economic and Social Research FoundationNurses in Times of Economic Crisis: Casualties of Capitalist Logic in the Global North and GlobalSouthSalimah Valiani, Ontario Nurses AssociationDoes Maternal Education Affect Child Health? Evidence from ChinaJingjie Lu, Shandong UniversitySession6Gender and Economic SecurityChair: Amrita Chatterjee, South Asian Forum for EnvironmentMother’s Social Support and Daughter’s: Are They the Same?Zhang Xufan, Nanjing UniversityGender Discrimination in Promotion: Evidence from Urban ChinaShisong Qing, Renmin University of ChinaGender Differences in Public Environmental Behaviors Based on 2006 and 2009 Data in Xi'an, ChinaFeng Wang and Zhihua Cheng, Northwest UniversityFragility and Finance in a Changing Labor Market: A Case Study of Gendered Access to Capital in aRural Chinese ContextShailaja Fennell and Yan Gao, University of Cambridge25 | P age


Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 26, <strong>2011</strong>, 8:30 – 10:10 ContinuedSession Women as Managers and Entrepreneurs7Chair: Marit Widman, Swedish University of Agricultural ScienceFemale Entrepreneurship in China: Opportunity- or Necessity-Based?Tonia Warnecke, Nicholas Nunn, and Lucas Hernandez,Rollins CollegeWoman Entrepreneurs - New Identity Constituted in Post-1978 Mainland ChinaDongling Zhang, Arizona State UniversityHow is the Professional Ethics of Elderly Care Gendered? An Exploratory Research of the Managers ofGroup-Homes in JapanSeiichi Matsukawa, Tokyo Gakugei UniversityHispanic and Latina Businesswomen in the United StatesAlicia Girón and Mirosalba Lara, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM)26 | P age

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