'My shop is now in my phone': Rural women entrepreneurs in lockdown Bangladesh

Juli Huang, PhD (University of Edinburgh): öffentlicher Vortrag im Rahmen des Forschungskolloquiums Ethnologie

Datum: 9. November 2021
Zeit: 16.15 Uhr bis 17.45 Uhr
Ort: per Zoom

Women’s Entrepreneurship as Disruptive Development in Bangladesh

Juli Huang, PhD University of Edinburgh

Women’s entrepreneurship has been a key strategy in international development and poverty alleviation initiatives for decades. Increasingly reorganised using models influenced by Silicon Valley-style notions of ‘disruptive innovation’, such projects require reformatting women into a specific style of entrepreneur with particular market-aligned skills, habits, and attitudes. Yet rather than providing game-changing business models that transform the ways in which the poor interact with markets and thereby improve their circumstances, these initiatives ‘disrupt’ women’s lives in ways that dislocate them from important social relationships and generate new and unsustainable forms of dependency. Focusing on Bangladesh – a country at the forefront of inventing market-based development models that hinge on the efforts of women – this talk will explore the meanings and experiences of disruptive entrepreneurship and compare them with the experiences of women who pursue income-generating activities more aligned with their own priorities of gaining self-reliance and renewing social ties.

Juli Qermezi Huang is an economic anthropologist whose research focuses on social enterprise and the use of new technologies, data, and markets for poverty alleviation. She is a Lecturer in Anthropology of Development at the University of Edinburgh and a Fellow at the Edinburgh Futures Institute. She is author of To Be an Entrepreneur: Social Enterprise and Disruptive Development in Bangladesh (2020, Cornell University Press) and Tribeswomen of Iran: Weaving Memories among Qashqa’i Nomads (2009, 2014, I. B. Tauris). As a British Academy and Wolfson Foundation Fellow, she is embarking on a new research project on the everyday data practices of social enterprises in Bangladesh and Scotland.