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Unpacking Women's Tourism Work in a Sanctioned Destination
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Unpacking Women's Tourism Work in a Sanctioned Destination

Siamak Seyfi Dr, Albert Nsom Kimbu, Hosseini Seyedasaad Dr, Vo-Thanh Tan Prof and Zaman Mustafeed Dr
Annals of Tourism Research, Vol.118, 104152
05/2026

Abstract

Tourism work Tourism crisis Gendered resilience Feminist political economy SDG 8 Decent work and economic growth SDG5 Gender Equality Economic sanctions Theocracy Tourism labour Religious governance
This study examines how international economic sanctions reshape women's work and livelihoods in Iran's tourism sector through the theoretical lens of feminist political economy. Drawing on interviews conducted in two phases around 2018 and again in 2024, the study unveils how sanction pressures operate across macro, meso, and micro levels, giving rise to three interrelated processes: gendered economic scarring, whereby sanctions deepen women's labour exclusion; sanction-driven informalisation, through which economic risk is shifted from institutions to women's insecure work; and a political economy of survival, in which women's adaptive labour sustains households without producing empowerment. By reconceptualising sanctions as long-term pressures on tourism economies, the study extends research on tourism crises, labour relations , and gendered inequality in crisis-ridden destinations.

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