Why does sub-Saharan Africa exhibit the highest rates of gender inequality in the world? This article evaluates the contributions of Christian missionary societies in German East Africa to current socioeconomic gender inequalities in Tanzania. Previous studies ascribe a comparatively benign long-term effect of missionary societies, in particular of the Protestant denomination, on economic, developmental, and political outcomes. This article contrasts that perception by focusing on the wider cultural impact of the civilizing mission in colonial Africa. The analysis rests on a novel georeferenced dataset on German East Africa - based on digitized colonial maps and extensive historical records available in the German colonial archives - and th...
We combine the date-of-observation found in Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas and a newly-constructed dat...
In the first chapter, titled “Educational Gender Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Long-Term Persp...
Third Place in the Richard J. and Martha D. Denman Undergraduate Reseach Forum, Humanities DivisionT...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
This article aims to look at the church’s role in the formation and up-keeping of gender inequality,...
This article historicises gender relations among Wampar speakers in New Guinea (PNG). It analyses th...
Abstract: This essay addresses two unanswered questions on gender justice in postcolonial Francophon...
Most countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have made great strides towards more accessible and higher qual...
Women are a key to development, and gender is crucial to development policies. However, Western deve...
Anglican missionaries arriving in Uganda’s Acholiland in 1903 saw the local peoples as in need not j...
The increasing use of missionary church records in studies of African human capital formation appear...
Peer reviewedThis article contributes to the continuing debate on gender equity in the African Init...
This study investigates the roots of gender inequalities in contemporary African lives. The study ha...
Protestant missionaries have recently been praised for their comparatively benign features concernin...
We combine the date-of-observation found in Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas and a newly-constructed dat...
In the first chapter, titled “Educational Gender Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Long-Term Persp...
Third Place in the Richard J. and Martha D. Denman Undergraduate Reseach Forum, Humanities DivisionT...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
The colonial legacy of African underdevelopment is widely debated but hard to document. In this arti...
This article aims to look at the church’s role in the formation and up-keeping of gender inequality,...
This article historicises gender relations among Wampar speakers in New Guinea (PNG). It analyses th...
Abstract: This essay addresses two unanswered questions on gender justice in postcolonial Francophon...
Most countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have made great strides towards more accessible and higher qual...
Women are a key to development, and gender is crucial to development policies. However, Western deve...
Anglican missionaries arriving in Uganda’s Acholiland in 1903 saw the local peoples as in need not j...
The increasing use of missionary church records in studies of African human capital formation appear...
Peer reviewedThis article contributes to the continuing debate on gender equity in the African Init...
This study investigates the roots of gender inequalities in contemporary African lives. The study ha...
Protestant missionaries have recently been praised for their comparatively benign features concernin...
We combine the date-of-observation found in Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas and a newly-constructed dat...
In the first chapter, titled “Educational Gender Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Long-Term Persp...
Third Place in the Richard J. and Martha D. Denman Undergraduate Reseach Forum, Humanities DivisionT...