Gender-based oppression is a pervasive global challenge, but has taken a back seat to other issues in Mozambique. The purpose of this grounded theory study was to explore how Mozambican women manage multiple oppressions in their lives in the context of the AIDS epidemic. Using interviews, documents, and constant comparison, we constructed a theory, Putting on and Taking Off the Capulana, to explain how women are socialized into and push back against the prevailing societal misogyny. The theory comprises four categories: Putting on the Capulana, Turning a Blind Eye, Playing the Game, and Taking Off the Capulana. Women adopt sex-role expectations, becoming socialized into patriarchal society. They are silent about their oppression, and societ...
In spite of continuous research on colonial subjugation and power appropriation, little investigatio...
This report presents the findings of a qualitative study carried out in Maputo, Mozambique, among yo...
As the HIV/AIDS pandemic matures increasingly more women are infected than men. The heightened preva...
This thesis is an ethnography of women from a poor, periurban neighbourhood of Maputo, Mozambique, d...
The Mozambican civil war, 1977–1992, left an ambiguous legacy for women. Whilst women were among the...
Masters of ArtIn this full thesis, I explore the impact that HIV and AIDS pandemic is having in the ...
Mozambique is currently undergoing an intense cycle of extractive activities, with most of the gener...
14th CODESRIA General Assembly, 8-12 June, 2015, Dakar, SenegalMy feminist and critical scientific w...
The aim of this study is to investigate the role of female empowerment and NGOs in HIV-prevention. A...
This study is the first in a series of three on gender policies and feminisation of poverty in Mozam...
Poor, black women in their young adulthood are the greatest victims of the HIV/AIDS epidemic that ra...
This study sought to examine patriarchal stereotypes which are held against African women through Si...
Most gender inclined theories are aimed at awareness creation on experiences of women in order to pr...
This research aims at analysing literature produced by African women as means of resistance to those...
This thesis discusses the missing or underrepresented women of power and authority within the writte...
In spite of continuous research on colonial subjugation and power appropriation, little investigatio...
This report presents the findings of a qualitative study carried out in Maputo, Mozambique, among yo...
As the HIV/AIDS pandemic matures increasingly more women are infected than men. The heightened preva...
This thesis is an ethnography of women from a poor, periurban neighbourhood of Maputo, Mozambique, d...
The Mozambican civil war, 1977–1992, left an ambiguous legacy for women. Whilst women were among the...
Masters of ArtIn this full thesis, I explore the impact that HIV and AIDS pandemic is having in the ...
Mozambique is currently undergoing an intense cycle of extractive activities, with most of the gener...
14th CODESRIA General Assembly, 8-12 June, 2015, Dakar, SenegalMy feminist and critical scientific w...
The aim of this study is to investigate the role of female empowerment and NGOs in HIV-prevention. A...
This study is the first in a series of three on gender policies and feminisation of poverty in Mozam...
Poor, black women in their young adulthood are the greatest victims of the HIV/AIDS epidemic that ra...
This study sought to examine patriarchal stereotypes which are held against African women through Si...
Most gender inclined theories are aimed at awareness creation on experiences of women in order to pr...
This research aims at analysing literature produced by African women as means of resistance to those...
This thesis discusses the missing or underrepresented women of power and authority within the writte...
In spite of continuous research on colonial subjugation and power appropriation, little investigatio...
This report presents the findings of a qualitative study carried out in Maputo, Mozambique, among yo...
As the HIV/AIDS pandemic matures increasingly more women are infected than men. The heightened preva...