Quelle: European Journal of Human Resource Management Studies, 1 (2018) 2, S 55-77
Inhalt: This study ascertained the significant effectiveness of Nigeria’s microfinance model of financial inclusion on women empowerment. Following reforms in the financial system geared towards enhancing women financial inclusion and digitalization of financial products and services, its effect on women empowerment becomes imperative. Specifically, we evaluated the effect of available microfinance banks’ products in rural communities via rent savings, child education, new born and daily savings account on women empowerment. A descriptive survey design was utilized to realize our objective. Two hundred (200) questionnaires were distributed to respondents, out of which one hundred and ninety (190) were fully completed and used for the analysis. After checking for internal reliability of the responses through the Alpha Cronbach’s test, we proceeded to applying Pearson correlation and regression estimations. From the regression estimation, we identified a positive and significant relationship between women empowerment and microfinance banks’ products: rent savings, child education, new born and daily savings account. Thus, microfinance model is a policy in the right direction that will result in more financial inclusion of the women population especially, in rural communities. Subsequently, we recommend the creation of more women tailored products by microfinance banks. This will avail them the opportunity to choose from variety of products and services that specifically suit their needs. Furthermore, collateral for women to access finance from these microfinance banks should be community/socially based rather than individually based.
Schlagwörter:Nigeria; Nigeria; Mikrofinanzierung; microfinance; woman; Empowerment; empowerment; Kreditvergabe; lending; Sparen; savings; Benachteiligung; deprivation; gender-specific factors; Partizipation; participation; Entwicklungsland; developing country; Afrika südlich der Sahara; Africa South of the Sahara; financial inclusion; microfinance products
SSOAR Kategorie:Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie
Quelle: Towards Gender Equity in Development. Oxford, 2018, S 217-236
Inhalt: A substantial amount of development programming assumes that women have preferences or aptitudes that are more conducive to economic development. For example, conditional cash transfer programmes commonly deliver funding to female household heads, and many microcredit schemes focus on women’s savings groups. This chapter examines a public goods game in northern Liberia. Women contributed substantially more to a small-scale development project when playing with other women than in mixed-gender groups, where they contributed at about the same levels as men. We try to explain this composition effect using a structural model, survey responses, and a second manipulation. Results suggest women in the all-women group put more weight on co-operation regardless of the value of the public good, the fear of discovery, or the desire to match others’ behaviour. We conjecture that players have stronger motivation to signal public-spiritedness when primed to consider themselves representatives of the women of the community.
Schlagwörter:economic development (on national level); Wirtschaftsentwicklung; Kollektivverhalten; Liberia; woman; collective behavior; Liberia; gender-specific factors; nonmarket good; Westafrika; West Africa; öffentliches Gut; gender; microcredit schemes; public goods; women's savings groups
SSOAR Kategorie:Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Labyrinthe der Straflosigkeit: Frauenmorde in Ciudad Juárez und extreme Gewalt in Mexiko heute
Titelübersetzung:Labyrinths of impunity: the killing of women in Ciudad Juárez and extreme violence in Mexico today
Autor/in:
Melgar, Lucía
Quelle: GENDER - Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft, 3 (2011) 2, S 90-97
Inhalt: "Der vorliegende Text behandelt die brutalen Frauenmorde (feminicidio), die seit 1993 in den mexikanischen Grenzstädten Ciudad Juärez und Chihuahua stattfinden, als extremes Beispiel für misogyne Gewalt und Verletzung der Menschenrechte. Die Nichtverfolgung der Täter und die damit verbundene Straflosigkeit sowie die Normalisierung von Gewalt gingen der aktuellen Toleranz von Gewalt im mexikanischen 'Drogenkrieg' voraus. Die Auflagen, die der Interamerikanische Gerichtshof für Menschenrechte dem mexikanischen Staat im Kontext des Falles 'Campo algodonero' machte, werden nicht angemessen erfüllt." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "While the extreme violence prevailing in Mexico has overshadowed the intensity of gender violence, feminicidio continues. This essay reviews the infamous murders of women occurring in Ciudad Juärez and Chihuahua since 1993, as an exemplary case of misogynistic violence and human rights violations. It argues that the process of not solving feminicide at the border allowed for the normalization of extreme violence and impunity, a precedent to the current tolerance of violence in Mexico, under the 'war on drugs'. In such a context, the historical ruling of the Inter-American Human Rights Court against the Mexican State in the case of feminicide is ill-fated." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:International Court of Justice; Mexiko; Latin America; sexual offense; human rights violation; historical analysis; Menschenrechtsverletzung; barbarism; Central America; Mexico; criminal law; offender; Sexualdelikt; historische Analyse; justice; homicide; Tötungsdelikt; Strafrecht; violence; Mittelamerika; Gewalt; woman; court decision; Entwicklungsland; Gerechtigkeit; Täter; gender-specific factors; Barbarei; Gerichtsentscheidung; developing country; Internationaler Gerichtshof; Lateinamerika
SSOAR Kategorie:Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Sozialgeschichte, historische Sozialforschung, soziale Probleme
Geschlechtsspezifische Gewalt und Gegenstrategien von Frauenrechts- und Gender-Organisationen in Südafrika
Titelübersetzung:Gender-based violence, women's rights and gender organisations in South Africa
Autor/in:
Schäfer, Rita
Quelle: GENDER - Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft, 3 (2011) 2, S 61-75
Inhalt: "Das rassistische und sexistische Machtgebaren der Weißen, die systematische Demütigung und Unterdrückung schwarzer Männer sowie die fortschreitende Militarisierung der gesamten Gesellschaft während der Apartheid gelten als wichtige Faktoren für die Entstehung der geschlechtsspezifischen Gewaltmuster in Südafrika. Nach anfänglichen Rechtsreformen und einer innovativen Gender-Politik der ANC-Regierung in den 1990er Jahren sind Frauen- und Gender-Organisationen heute sowohl mit dem gewaltsamen Erbe der Apartheid als auch mit frauenfeindlichen Agitationen durch ANC-Politiker konfrontiert." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "The white settler regime in South Africa, which was racist and sexist at the same time, oppressed and humiliated black men. In addition, the militarization of the society influenced the development of structural and gender-based violence in South Africa. After some innovative legal reforms and the introduction of gender policies by the ANC government in the 1990s some ANC politicians has become hostile against women's organisations and gender organisations. At the same time these organisations have to cope with the violent heritage of Apartheid." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:Republik Südafrika; Republic of South Africa; Apartheid; apartheid; woman; Gewalt; violence; gender-specific factors; Gender Mainstreaming; gender mainstreaming; Rassismus; racism; Frauenorganisation; women's organization; Frauenrechtlerin; feminist; politischer Wandel; political change; historische Entwicklung; historical development; Ungleichheit; inequality; Recht; law; Vernetzung; networking; Strukturproblem; structural problem; politische Aktivität; political activity; Lobby; lobby; südliches Afrika; Southern Africa; Entwicklungsland; developing country; Afrika südlich der Sahara; Africa South of the Sahara; Afrika; Africa
SSOAR Kategorie:Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, soziale Probleme, Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, allgemeine Geschichte
Quelle: University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP); Cambridge (RECOUP Policy Brief, 6), 2009. 6 S
Inhalt: Gender gaps in educational access, schooling quality and labour market outcomes are pervasive in Pakistan. This brief discusses the findings of three recent studies in Pakistan that highlight the role of education in improving individual productivity, increasing earnings, bringing people out of poverty and providing a pathway to gender equality in the labour market. The papers note the policy implications of the research both for education and labour market policy.
Frauen in Sanaa: öffentliche Präsenz und mediale Repräsentation
Titelübersetzung:Women in Sanaa: Public Appearance and Visual Representation
Autor/in:
Linke, Irina
Quelle: Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 10 (2009) 2, 24 S
Inhalt: Ein explosionsartiger Anstieg der Mediennutzung (ausländisches Satellitenfernsehen, ein eigener nationaler Satellitenkanal sowie Foto- und Videopraxen) verändert nicht nur die "Öffentlichkeit", sondern den lokalen sozialen Raum in einem speziellen global-lokalen Spannungsfeld insgesamt.
In diesem Artikel wird gezeigt, wie Frauen in der Hauptstadt des Jemen Fernsehen und andere Bildmedien strategisch nutzen, indem sie entlang der Grenzen von Sichtbarkeit und Unsichtbarkeit die geschlechterspezifischen sozialen Räume ihrer Lebenswelt verändern. Medienbilder eröffnen als Teil der Lebenswelt der Akteure (Blick-) Räume und ermöglichen (Blick-) Kontakte. Die Blicke prägen den sozialen Raum und spielen bei der wechselseitigen Konstitution von Räumen und Körpern eine Rolle. Dies wird sowohl auf der performativen als auch auf der diskursiven Ebene verhandelt.
Die vorgestellte Fallstudie ist Teil eines Forschungsprojekts, das auf einem einjährigen Feldaufenthalt, Feldnotizen und 45 Stunden audiovisuellem Material beruht. Anhand der Diskurse der jungen Frauen über eigene Bilderpraxen wird nachvollzogen, wie sie die "Gefährdung" einer gesellschaftlichen Ordnung durchbuchstabieren, wie sie ihr Interesse an Veränderung artikulieren und welche strategischen Überlegungen sie anstellen, um "sichtbar" zu werden. Dabei verweist der Beitrag auf kulturell unterschiedliche Lesarten dessen, was man sehen kann.
Inhalt: An exponential increase in media usage in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa (foreign satellite channels, Yemeni TV, photography and video) changes not only the (media) public (Öffentlichkeit), but social spaces in a local setting within a particular global-local framework.
In this article I discuss women in the Yemeni capital who use television and other pictorial representations strategically, and, in reworking the frontiers between visibility and invisibility, change the gendered social spaces of their life world (Lebenswelt). Pictures, as parts of the life world open up views into new spaces ([Blick-] Räume) and make new relationships ([Blick-] Kontakte) possible. Looks and gazes determine social space and play a part in the social construction of bodies and spaces. This is negotiated on the performative as well as on the discursive level.
The case study I present is part of a larger research project based on one year of fieldwork, field notes and 45 hours of audio-visual material. Analysis of the discourses of young women about their own image practices reveals how they perceive the endangerment of a social order, how they articulate their interest in change, and their strategies for becoming "visible." Thus, this article refers to culturally different readings of what can be seen.
Schlagwörter:zone; Öffentlichkeit; Kulturwandel; Jemen; Akteur; Islamic society; cultural change; field research; Medien; ethnology; the public; social actor; Übersetzung; television; representation; Yemen; body; social space; audiovisual media; Fernsehen; Körper; translation; interdependence; satellite; gender; Repräsentation; Auswirkung; Raum; audiovisuelle Medien; Gender; woman; sozialer Wandel; Feldforschung; Interdependenz; impact; sozialer Raum; Ethnologie; lebenswelt; Satellit; gender-specific factors; Lebenswelt; social change; islamische Gesellschaft; media; Visuelle Anthropologie; visuelle Kultur; Performance; mediale Repräsentation; Un-/Sichtbarkeit; Gesicht; visual culture; fieldwork; Yemen; performance; social space; pictorial representation in the media; in-/visibility; face
SSOAR Kategorie:Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Technikfolgenabschätzung, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Rundfunk, Telekommunikation
Public-private sector segmentation in the labour market in Pakistan
Autor/in:
Aslam, Monazza; Kingdon, Geeta
Quelle: Journal of Asian Economics, 20 (2009) 1, S 34-39
Inhalt: This study investigates public–private sector wage differentials for male and female waged employees in Pakistan. This is done using latest nationally representative data from the Pakistan Living Standards Measurement Survey (PSLM) 2005. We adopt three methodologies to obtain robust estimates of the wage differential and the results reveal that public sector workers enjoy large wage premia. The gross pro-public wage differential is much larger for women than for men. Our findings also show that while private and public sector workers' differing characteristics 'explain' a larger proportion of the private–public wage gap for men, this is not the case for women.
Schlagwörter:Arbeitsmarkt; privater Sektor; private sector; Pakistan; wage difference; öffentlicher Sektor; Lohnunterschied; public sector; Mann; woman; South Asia; Südasien; gender-specific factors; man; Pakistan; labor market; public-private sector; labour market
SSOAR Kategorie:Arbeitsmarktforschung, Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Gendered experiences of teaching in poor rural areas of Ghana
Autor/in:
Casely-Hayford, Leslie
Quelle: University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP); Cambridge (RECOUP Working Papers, 8), 2007. 17 S
Inhalt: The low presence of female teachers serving in schools in deprived rural areas is one of the main constraints militating against girls' access and achievement in basic education in Ghana. Studies suggest that low self-esteem among girls is a key factor preventing them from attaining higher levels of education, which can be enhanced through more gender sensitive teaching methods, and the presence of female teachers as role models. This paper investigates the reasons why the majority of Ghanaian teachers avoid –if they can - postings to rural deprived areas and why girls, in particular, are not entering the teaching profession. The study adopts a predominantly qualitative approach, exploring the perceptions of primary stakeholders involved in basic education, including female teachers living in deprived rural areas, girls at upper primary and secondary levels of education and community members. Districts with the lowest percentage of female teachers were selected for the study – where, also, the lowest percentage of girls enter and remain in the basic school system. The paper suggests reasons why Ghanaian girls continue to miss the opportunity to be taught by female role models and why they do not opt to become teachers themselves.
Researching gender: explorations into sexuality and HIV/AIDS in African contexts
Autor/in:
Chege, Fatuma N.
Quelle: University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP); Cambridge (RECOUP Working Papers, 7), 2007. 15 S
Inhalt: The author demonstrates that collaborating with children using a gender-sensitive life-cycle approach yields social and health dividends. The paper focuses upon young people and children engaged in HIV/AIDS education, not only as consumers of information but also as generators of knowledge pertinent to their needs, aspirations, anxieties, fears, hopes and dreams. This subject-centred approach to education is facilitated by innovative methodologies that allow young people to talk frankly with adults and amongst themselves, to participate in community theatre designed to help different types of people address issues of common interest, and to work with experienced adult researchers in generating relevant data.
"Blood tests with the eyes": negotiating conjugal relations during the HIV/AIDS crisis in rural Namibia
Autor/in:
Pauli, Julia; Schnegg, Michael
Quelle: Aridity, change and conflict in Africa : proceedings of an international ACACIA conference held at Königswinter, Germany, October 1-3, 2003. Köln (Colloquium Africanum), 2007, S 411-439
Inhalt: Research from different parts of Africa indicates that to grasp the HIV/AIDS catastrophe, an in-depth understanding of conjugal relationships is crucial. In casual, short-term sexual interactions, safer sex practices, foremost condom use, have become more and more prevalent. This does not hold true for long-term relationships. Marriage rates have substantially declined in many parts of southern Africa. Without marriage as a possible frame for conjugal relations meanings and practices of 'love' have become the structuring concept of conjugality. Love relations are perceived as based on trust. This contradicts the use of condoms, a visible sign of mistrust. Based on long-term ethnographic field research in rural northwest Namibia we analyse the interconnections between conjugal relations, perceptions of risk and practices of safe sex in detail.