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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
숙명여자대학교 아시아여성연구원 Asian Women Asian Women Vol. 17
발행연도
2003.12
수록면
39 - 64 (26page)

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This paper explores the colonial government’s agricultural policies and their impact on women’s lives in rural areas. For this purpose, the main focus of the analysis is centered on the relation between ‘Increase of Rice Product Plan’ policy(IRPP) and women’s migration for their jobs in the cities. The IRPP resulted in poverty of rural areas and demobilization, and paved a way for some women from the rural areas to accelerate their migration to the cities. The most popular types of occupations which women chose after they moved to the cities were in the order of factory workers, clerks, housemaids, and service-related jobs. Considering the fact that most of the people under 17 who worked in these fields were women, this study indicated that more young women than men of the same ages were sacrificed by migrating from the farm to the cities in order to support the family. In addition, it also shows that young girls were more preferred to men for their lower wages by Japanese enterprises. The major finding is that the rural women in the 1930s were placed under the multi-leveled suppressing patriarchal structures, consisting of patriarchal family structure, the colonial government’s patriarchal structure, and the colonial patriarchal economy. So, the impact of agricultural policies on women’s lives and its suppressing characteristic were deepened through these patriarchal structures.

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Abstract
Introduction
Agricultural Policies in the 1930s
The Migration of Rural Women
Women’s Lives in the Cities, Seen Through Their Occupations
Conclusion
References

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