Home, Care, and Career – At What Cost? The Lived Experiences of Working Mothers in Urban Bangladesh
(2025) SIMZ21 20251Graduate School
- Abstract
- What does it take to be a working mother in developing societies? How do working mothers navigate the dynamics of work and home? These questions evoke a critical issue that invites more scholarly attention to understand the lived experiences of women entering formal labour markets in developing countries. Using qualitative interviews and thematic analysis, the study examines how middle-class working mothers in urban Bangladesh perceive and navigate their dual responsibilities and whether being a mother influences their career trajectories in any way. Ten full-time working women, with at least one child aged between 5 months and 17 years and working at either an NGO or an engineering firm, were interviewed in the study. Utilizing four... (More)
- What does it take to be a working mother in developing societies? How do working mothers navigate the dynamics of work and home? These questions evoke a critical issue that invites more scholarly attention to understand the lived experiences of women entering formal labour markets in developing countries. Using qualitative interviews and thematic analysis, the study examines how middle-class working mothers in urban Bangladesh perceive and navigate their dual responsibilities and whether being a mother influences their career trajectories in any way. Ten full-time working women, with at least one child aged between 5 months and 17 years and working at either an NGO or an engineering firm, were interviewed in the study. Utilizing four theoretical lenses, collected data was analyzed from which three overarching themes were identified, each with its own set of subthemes. The findings reveal that participants faced persistent pressure to excel at work while meeting expectations surrounding household and caregiving at home. Many felt compelled to live up to the “ideal” standards of motherhood prescribed by society and culture, leading to face role-conflict situations and corresponding mental load that influenced their career choices and overall well-being. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9203955
- author
- Nishat, Anika Tasnim LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- SIMZ21 20251
- year
- 2025
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- professional middle-class women, home, motherhood, career, triple burden, role-conflict.
- language
- English
- id
- 9203955
- date added to LUP
- 2025-06-25 14:21:32
- date last changed
- 2025-06-25 14:21:32
@misc{9203955, abstract = {{What does it take to be a working mother in developing societies? How do working mothers navigate the dynamics of work and home? These questions evoke a critical issue that invites more scholarly attention to understand the lived experiences of women entering formal labour markets in developing countries. Using qualitative interviews and thematic analysis, the study examines how middle-class working mothers in urban Bangladesh perceive and navigate their dual responsibilities and whether being a mother influences their career trajectories in any way. Ten full-time working women, with at least one child aged between 5 months and 17 years and working at either an NGO or an engineering firm, were interviewed in the study. Utilizing four theoretical lenses, collected data was analyzed from which three overarching themes were identified, each with its own set of subthemes. The findings reveal that participants faced persistent pressure to excel at work while meeting expectations surrounding household and caregiving at home. Many felt compelled to live up to the “ideal” standards of motherhood prescribed by society and culture, leading to face role-conflict situations and corresponding mental load that influenced their career choices and overall well-being.}}, author = {{Nishat, Anika Tasnim}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Home, Care, and Career – At What Cost? The Lived Experiences of Working Mothers in Urban Bangladesh}}, year = {{2025}}, }