4.2 Article

Securitizing Women: Gender, Precaution, and Risk in Indian Finance

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SIGNS
卷 43, 期 2, 页码 301-325

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UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/693537

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In 2013, the government of India announced the creation of the Bharatiya Mahila Bank (BMB), or the Indian Women's Bank, offering financial services largely to women. The bank was a financialized response to the 2012 New Delhi rape case that mobilized mass protests against sexual violence and harassment in public spaces. Curtailing economic instability in the wake of the protests, the BMB became a means of securitizing women's bodies through financial means. While the BMB was premised on an idea of precautious empowerment through financial inclusion, India offers a challenge to the almost global dominance of men in the upper echelons of finance. With around 40 percent of financial assets controlled by women-headed banks, Indian women have challenged the naturalization of men in finance. Their rise has been supported by a history of social banking and unionization of bank workers. Examining these two cases laterally, this article argues that both narratives of women in finance in India hinge on the notion of precaution. I argue that banking for women and women bankers stabilize the economic order under financialization rather than challenging the conservatism of patriarchal capitalism and the gendered production of public space.

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