Journal of Socio-Cultural Studies of Khorasan

Journal of Socio-Cultural Studies of Khorasan

Life Challenges in the Shadow of Headship Loss: The Narrative of a Female-Headed Household in Birjand

Authors
1 Assistant Professor, Department of Educational Sciences, Faculty of Educational Sciences and Psychology, University of Birjand, Birjand, Iran
2 Assistant Professor, Department of Education, Psychology, and Counseling, Farhangian University, Tehran, Iran
3 Assistant Professor, Department of Educational Sciences, Farhangian University, P.O. Box 889-14665, Tehran, Iran.
4 Bachelor’s Degree Graduate, Birjand University of Farhangian, Birjand
Abstract
Introduction
Female-headed households constitute one of the most vulnerable social groups globally, facing considerable psychological, social, and economic pressures. These women not only fulfill traditional female roles but also carry the full responsibility of managing and providing for their families, which creates distinct and multifaceted challenges. The literature highlights a wide range of difficulties encountered by female heads of households, including financial hardship, restricted access to education, insufficient social support, and psychosocial strains that collectively undermine their quality of life and overall well-being. This vulnerability is particularly acute in rural regions and provinces such as South Khorasan, Iran, where female-headed households represent a significant portion of the population. Understanding their lived experiences, the underlying factors shaping these challenges, and their broader consequences is therefore essential for designing effective interventions. Against this backdrop, the present study employs a qualitative narrative inquiry to examine the life challenges of a rural female household head in Birjand, with a focus on the socio-economic and psychological dimensions of her experience.
 
Methodology
This study adopts a qualitative narrative inquiry approach, emphasizing the exploration of lived experiences through personal storytelling situated within social, temporal, and spatial contexts. Data were collected through semi-structured narrative interviews with a rural female head of household, approximately 65 years old, and were complemented by the researcher’s field notes and direct observations to enrich contextual understanding. Purposive sampling was employed to ensure the participant’s unique situation provided deep and relevant insights into the research questions. Interview transcripts were prepared verbatim, and data analysis was conducted using thematic analysis and systematic coding. Fourteen organizing themes were identified and subsequently distilled into four overarching themes representing the core challenges. Intercoder reliability, assessed using Holsti’s coefficient, produced a strong agreement score of 0.81, confirming analytical rigor. To further enhance trustworthiness, triangulation was applied by cross-validating participant quotations, thematic structures, and findings from existing scholarly literature.
 
Findings
The analysis revealed four overarching categories that capture the major challenges faced by rural female-headed households:
Economic Instability and Informal Employment
The participant described subsisting on meager wages earned through long working hours in irregular, part-time, or home-based jobs that lacked job security and employment benefits. Such conditions reinforce persistent poverty and erode household living standards. As a result, there is an increased reliance on governmental aid and charitable organizations, which, while offering temporary relief, remain insufficient to address the structural roots of economic instability.
Educational and Skill Deficits
Limited literacy, restricted access to higher education, and inadequate vocational training were reported as significant barriers to stable employment and sustainable income generation. These deficits not only constrain individual opportunities but also perpetuate intergenerational cycles of poverty, limiting economic mobility and undermining long-term family stability.
Insufficient Social Support
The participant’s account highlighted the absence of adequate social protection, particularly in areas such as childcare and domestic responsibilities. Weak social policies and a sense of societal isolation further compound the difficulties experienced by female heads of households in rural contexts, leaving them with few reliable support networks.
Psychological and Social Challenges
The heavy burden of multiple role responsibilities was linked to feelings of loneliness, social stigma, and heightened psychological stress. These pressures diminish coping and crisis-management capacities while also undermining both mental and physical health.
Taken together, these themes demonstrate the multidimensional and interrelated nature of the challenges faced by rural female-headed households. They underscore the urgent need for comprehensive, multisectoral interventions that are sensitive to the economic, educational, social, and psychological dimensions of women’s lived experiences.
 
Discussion
The findings closely align with both national and international research, indicating that the vulnerabilities of female-headed households extend far beyond economic deprivation. The dynamic interplay of financial hardship, limited educational opportunities, inadequate social support, and psychosocial strain underscores the need for holistic and integrated policies. Economic empowerment, while necessary, cannot be effective in isolation without parallel reforms in the social, cultural, and educational domains, alongside accessible psychological care. Policies aimed at improving literacy, vocational training, and social protection must therefore be complemented by mental health services and stigma-reduction initiatives. Social support programs should be designed with sensitivity to the caregiving and domestic responsibilities uniquely borne by female heads of households. Furthermore, fostering community engagement and participatory approaches in program design can enhance resilience and build social capital, both of which are essential for sustainable change. The participant’s narrative highlights the importance of reframing female heads of households not as passive recipients of aid but as active agents who, when adequately supported, can navigate adversity and foster family stability. This perspective resonates with contemporary theoretical approaches that emphasize strengths-based frameworks, underscoring women’s agency, resilience, and capacity for self-determination.
 
Conclusion
This study provides in-depth qualitative insights into the lived realities of a rural female-headed household in Birjand, Iran, revealing a complex nexus of economic, educational, social, and psychological challenges. The findings advocate for comprehensive, inclusive policy frameworks that move beyond addressing material poverty to also confront educational deficits, social isolation, and mental health concerns. Effective interventions should be multidimensional, integrating capacity-building initiatives, social protection, healthcare, and equitable access to education to promote sustainable empowerment. Such holistic approaches require coordinated efforts among government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and community-based groups. Future research should broaden the scope by including a more diverse sample of participants across different regions, employing mixed-methods designs to both validate emerging themes and test targeted interventions. Addressing the multifaceted needs of female-headed households is not only critical for advancing social equity and reducing poverty but also for promoting sustainable community development in rural Iran and comparable global contexts.
Keywords

Subjects


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  • Receive Date 23 November 2024
  • Revise Date 22 July 2025
  • Accept Date 10 August 2025