The thesis examines how the social construction of African women in development discourse transformed from the 1970s to the 2000s, focusing in particular on the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). From the 1970s to the 1990s representations of African women were based on women’s economic potential. The mainstreaming of gender in the 1990s resulted in women being represented as agents of change. This approach gave women an opportunity to play roles in decision-making but led to policies that failed to challenge the established institutions. The emphasis on women as agents of change opened doors to some African women but with implications for the women’s movement. Only some middle-class women appear to benefit but their gains ha...
In much of sub-Saharan Africa women are politically powerless and economically oppressed. For the mo...
Historically, the concepts of international development and women in development (WID) have been con...
Explicitly defining orthodoxies about women empowerment in Africa reveal that, unlike men, women lac...
In the 1960s, Irene Spry served as the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada (FWIC) representative ...
The key to the empowerment of women is their participation at all the stages and all levels of the d...
Women were, in the past, perceived as instruments of development in Africa. This is concretised by t...
grantor: University of TorontoFor middle-class white Canadians, international development ...
This publication is a continuation of the commitment of the women of South Africa to become agents o...
The concept of women’s development has now become an integral part of the development discourses and...
Writing about Women In Development is for me not only a challenge, but an opportunity to acknowledge...
Pre-print versionThe social construction of gender reflected in development theory has been increasi...
HSRC Press open access allows one free download per reader, but unlimited page viewing.Women are age...
A new consideration has developed in recent years that women are the key to develop-ment. The suppo...
After 1994, the South African government prioritized land reform as a strategy for development in or...
Abstract only availableAs democratic systems replaced previous military or single party governments,...
In much of sub-Saharan Africa women are politically powerless and economically oppressed. For the mo...
Historically, the concepts of international development and women in development (WID) have been con...
Explicitly defining orthodoxies about women empowerment in Africa reveal that, unlike men, women lac...
In the 1960s, Irene Spry served as the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada (FWIC) representative ...
The key to the empowerment of women is their participation at all the stages and all levels of the d...
Women were, in the past, perceived as instruments of development in Africa. This is concretised by t...
grantor: University of TorontoFor middle-class white Canadians, international development ...
This publication is a continuation of the commitment of the women of South Africa to become agents o...
The concept of women’s development has now become an integral part of the development discourses and...
Writing about Women In Development is for me not only a challenge, but an opportunity to acknowledge...
Pre-print versionThe social construction of gender reflected in development theory has been increasi...
HSRC Press open access allows one free download per reader, but unlimited page viewing.Women are age...
A new consideration has developed in recent years that women are the key to develop-ment. The suppo...
After 1994, the South African government prioritized land reform as a strategy for development in or...
Abstract only availableAs democratic systems replaced previous military or single party governments,...
In much of sub-Saharan Africa women are politically powerless and economically oppressed. For the mo...
Historically, the concepts of international development and women in development (WID) have been con...
Explicitly defining orthodoxies about women empowerment in Africa reveal that, unlike men, women lac...