The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this article, occupational statistics from Protestant marriage registers of historical Kampala are used to investigate the hypothesis that African gender inequality and female disempowerment are rooted in colonial times. We find that the arrival of Europeans in Uganda ignited a century-long transformation of Kampala involving a gender Kuznets curve. Men rapidly acquired literacy and quickly found their way into white-collar (high-status) employment in the wage economy built by the Europeans. Women took somewhat longer to obtain literacy and considerably longer to enter into white-collar and waged work. This led to increased gender inequality during th...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
Why does sub-Saharan Africa exhibit the highest rates of gender inequality in the world? This articl...
To what extent did sub-Saharan Africa's twentieth century schooling revolution benefit boys and girl...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
The renaissance of African economic history in the past decade has opened up new research avenues fo...
This study investigates the roots of gender inequalities in contemporary African lives. The study ha...
The increasing use of missionary church records in studies of African human capital formation appear...
This thesis offers new empirical insights on women’s empowerment in colonial and present-day in Ugan...
Protestant missionaries have recently been praised for their comparatively benign features concernin...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post‐colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post‐colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article explores the historical causes and consequences of gender divisions of labour in the Za...
We combine the date-of-observation found in Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas and a newly-constructed dat...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
Why does sub-Saharan Africa exhibit the highest rates of gender inequality in the world? This articl...
To what extent did sub-Saharan Africa's twentieth century schooling revolution benefit boys and girl...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
The renaissance of African economic history in the past decade has opened up new research avenues fo...
This study investigates the roots of gender inequalities in contemporary African lives. The study ha...
The increasing use of missionary church records in studies of African human capital formation appear...
This thesis offers new empirical insights on women’s empowerment in colonial and present-day in Ugan...
Protestant missionaries have recently been praised for their comparatively benign features concernin...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post‐colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post‐colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
This article explores the historical causes and consequences of gender divisions of labour in the Za...
We combine the date-of-observation found in Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas and a newly-constructed dat...
This article uses Anglican marriage registers from colonial and post-colonial Uganda to investigate ...
Why does sub-Saharan Africa exhibit the highest rates of gender inequality in the world? This articl...
To what extent did sub-Saharan Africa's twentieth century schooling revolution benefit boys and girl...