Brief

A Trapeze Act: Balancing Unpaid Care Work and Paid Work by Women in Nepal

Published on 1 June 2017

Women in paid work from low income families are engaged in poorly paid, precarious employment, even as they are overburdened with unpaid care work responsibilities.

This double burden has depleting consequences for both their mental and physical wellbeing, as well as those of their children. Women’s economic empowerment programmes have to both improve the options and conditions of women’s paid work and recognise, reduce and redistribute their unpaid care work burdens for these women to move from a double burden to a “double boon”.

Cite this publication

Ghosh, A., Singh, A. and Kayastha, B. (2017) ‘A Trapeze Act: Balancing Unpaid Care Work and Paid Work by Women in Nepal’, Policy Brief, Brighton: IDS

Authors

Anweshaa Ghosh
Anjam Singh
Bibhor Kayastha

Publication details

published by
IDS
language
English

Share

About this publication

Region
Nepal

Related content

Student Opinion

Support for first-generation learners

Rachna Vyas, IDS student, MA Governance, Development & Public Policy

27 March 2024