@article{842f94ff33444cd79699527555139323,
title = "'Noble Mothers' and their Others: Racialized Women Entrepreneurs and Poverty Finance",
keywords = "microfinance, entrepreneurialism, mothering, anti-poverty, welfare, gendered labor, women of color",
author = "\{Montes Ireland\}, Heather",
note = "Microfinance has become standardized within global development policy, disproportionately impacting the lives of women of the global South and, increasingly, in the global North with the dismantling of the welfare state. Poverty finance policies employ an entrepreneurial model to facilitate women's labor market participation whereby borrowers are extended microcredit, or small loans, to invest in their microbusinesses. Montes Ireland, Heather (2021) {"}'Noble Mothers' and their Others: Racialized Women Entrepreneurs and Poverty Finance,{"} Journal of International Women's Studies: Vol. 22: Iss. 7, Article 6. Available at: https://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol22/iss7/6",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "14",
language = "American English",
volume = "22",
journal = "Journal of International Women's Studies",
}