Indigenous Fijian female pupils and career choice: explaining generational gender reproduction |
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Authors: | Pam Nilan |
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Affiliation: | School of Humanities and Social Science, University of Newcastle , New South Wales, Australia |
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Abstract: | This paper examines aspects of the school-to-work transition process for high-achieving indigenous Fijian young women using selective data from a wider study of school-to-work transitions conducted in 2005. It appears that traditional and colonial understandings of the role of Fijian women still shape even high-achieving girls' career and life options; these are expressed through their subject choices at school and their narrow career aspirations. While the social reproduction mechanisms of schools are evident, families and communities are also implicated. High-achieving girls still tend to emulate the career choices of older women in their families and communities, even in the current context of a marked lessening of labour market opportunities for the time-honoured “white-collar” occupations of teaching, nursing and public service work. Some provisional interpretations, looking towards productive interventions at school, community and church level, of this phenomenon are offered. |
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Keywords: | Fiji school-to-work transition gender generational reproduction |
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