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Shattering the Illusion of Development: The Changing Status of Women and Challenges for the Feminist Movement in Puerto Rico

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Feminist Review

Abstract

In this paper we examine the weaknesses of development strategies which have been applied in Puerto Rico. The process of industrialization by invitation, referred to as Operation Bootstrap, was instituted by the United States of America by the end of the 1940s. This involved tax incentives and subsidies for companies and was dependent on industrial peace and low wages in labor-intensive, low-wage industries, especially those of textile and clothing. Naturally, women's labor was encouraged as a result of the lower cost, as well as assumed dexterity, of the female in such areas. While these new activity areas for women also allowed other benefits in the form of legislation and increased social services, the inherent problems of rapid, labor-intensive industrialization also led to displacement and increased underemployment and impoverization of female headed families from the 1960s onwards. The paper explores some of the changes in gender relations which resulted from these policies and looks at the challenges which the feminist movement in Puerto Rico has made, particularly with regard to state processes to bring about beneficial changes in the economic, legal, political and social status of women in Puerto Rico.

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Colón-Warren, A., Alegría-Ortega, I. Shattering the Illusion of Development: The Changing Status of Women and Challenges for the Feminist Movement in Puerto Rico. Fem Rev 59, 101–117 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1080/014177898339488

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/014177898339488

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