The Impact of Globalization on Gender Roles and Cultural Practices Among Women in Tamil Nadu

Thesis title: The Impact of Globalization on Gender Roles and Cultural Practices Among Women in Tamil Nadu
Author: Muthu, Saraswathi Priya
Thesis type: Diploma thesis
Supervisor: Kočí, Kateřina
Opponents: Grančayová, Michaela
Thesis language: English
Abstract:
This master’s thesis study how globalization has reshaped cultural practice and gender roles among women across three generations in urban and rural Tamil Nadu. Tamil Nadu’s prompt educational expansion, industrial growth and urbanization between determined traditional norms. The main research question is “How have women across three generations in urban and rural Tamil Nadu negotiated the tensions between traditional cultural expectations and the opportunities and pressure created by globalization?’’. The thesis guided by postcolonial feminism and intersectionality, the study examines three dimensions which are economic participation, education/empowerment and cultural identity which highlighting how caste, class, colonial legacies and location mediate globalization’s uneven effects. A mixed-methods case study design integrates qualitative semi-structured interviews (primary data) with secondary quantitative data from the National Family Health Survey, Census of India and Tamil Nadu government reports, alongside secondary qualitative sources including peer reviewed monographs and journal articles on Tamil Nadu women’s empowerment. The thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke,2006) spot patterns like rising urban female labour force participation and delayed marriage, in contrasted with rural limitations. A finding reveals women’s organizations in hybridizing traditions older generations maintained domestic roles between limited mobility, mid generations accessed informal work and education via Dravidian reforms and younger generation rural youth faced determined patriarchal barriers, while urban women adopt salaried jobs, digital self-expression and delayed marriage. Such pattern shows globalization’s dual role-expanding choices while strengthening inequalities filtered through local postcolonial contexts. Empirically, a mixed -methods triangulation provide refinement insights into Tamil Nadu’s transformations, contributing to Global South gender studies. Policy implications urge culturally sensitive reforms to foster equitable empowerment.
Keywords: Tamil Nadu; Globalization; Gender roles; mixed methods; Postcolonial Feminism; women empowerment.
Thesis title: The Impact of Globalization on Gender Roles and Cultural Practices Among Women in Tamil Nadu
Author: Muthu, Saraswathi Priya
Thesis type: Diplomová práce
Supervisor: Kočí, Kateřina
Opponents: Grančayová, Michaela
Thesis language: English
Abstract:
This master’s thesis study how globalization has reshaped cultural practice and gender roles among women across three generations in urban and rural Tamil Nadu. Tamil Nadu’s prompt educational expansion, industrial growth and urbanization between determined traditional norms. The main research question is “How have women across three generations in urban and rural Tamil Nadu negotiated the tensions between traditional cultural expectations and the opportunities and pressure created by globalization?’’. The thesis guided by postcolonial feminism and intersectionality, the study examines three dimensions which are economic participation, education/empowerment and cultural identity which highlighting how caste, class, colonial legacies and location mediate globalization’s uneven effects. A mixed-methods case study design integrates qualitative semi-structured interviews (primary data) with secondary quantitative data from the National Family Health Survey, Census of India and Tamil Nadu government reports, alongside secondary qualitative sources including peer reviewed monographs and journal articles on Tamil Nadu women’s empowerment. The thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke,2006) spot patterns like rising urban female labour force participation and delayed marriage, in contrasted with rural limitations. A finding reveals women’s organizations in hybridizing traditions older generations maintained domestic roles between limited mobility, mid generations accessed informal work and education via Dravidian reforms and younger generation rural youth faced determined patriarchal barriers, while urban women adopt salaried jobs, digital self-expression and delayed marriage. Such pattern shows globalization’s dual role-expanding choices while strengthening inequalities filtered through local postcolonial contexts. Empirically, a mixed -methods triangulation provide refinement insights into Tamil Nadu’s transformations, contributing to Global South gender studies. Policy implications urge culturally sensitive reforms to foster equitable empowerment.
Keywords: Globalization; Tamil Nadu; Postcolonial Feminism; Gender roles; mixed methods; women empowerment

Information about study

Study programme: International and Diplomatic Studies
Type of study programme: Magisterský studijní program
Assigned degree: Ing.
Institutions assigning academic degree: Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze
Faculty: Faculty of International Relations
Department: Department of International and Diplomatic Studies

Information on submission and defense

Date of assignment: 18. 12. 2024
Date of submission: 4. 12. 2025
Date of defense: 4. 2. 2026
Identifier in the InSIS system: https://insis.vse.cz/zp/90812/podrobnosti

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