TY - BOOK ID - 124299415 TI - Village ties : women, NGOs, and informal institutions in rural Bangladesh AU - Qayum, Nayma, AU - Qayum, Nayma PY - 2021 SN - 1978816480 1978816456 PB - New Brunswick, NJ : Rutgers University Press, DB - UniCat KW - Rural women KW - Non-governmental organizations KW - Social conditions. KW - Bangladesh, women's issues, NGOs, village, public policy, Rural Bangladesh, Asian Studies, grassroots organization, oppression, women's mobilization programs, Polli Shomaj, social relationships, South Asia, women in South Asia. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:124299415 AB - Across the global South, poor women’s lives are embedded in their social relationships and governed not just by formal institutions – rules that exist on paper – but by informal norms and practices. Village Ties takes the reader to Bangladesh, a country that has risen from the ashes of war, natural disaster, and decades of resource drain to become a development miracle. The book argues that grassroots women’s mobilization programs can empower women to challenge informal institutions when such programs are anti-oppression, deliberative, and embedded in their communities. Qayum dives into the work of Polli Shomaj (PS), a program of the development organization BRAC to show how the women of PS negotiate with state and society to alter the rules of the game, changing how poor people access resources including safety nets, the law, and governing spaces. These women create a complex and rapidly transforming world where multiple overlapping institutions exist – formal and informal, old and new, desirable and undesirable. In actively challenging power structures around them, these women defy stereotypes of poor Muslim women as backward, subservient, oppressed, and in need of saving. ER -