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How can we promote people-centered governance in Africa? Cell
phones/ information and communications technology (ICT) are shown
to be linked to neoliberal understandings of more democratic
governance structures, defined by the Worldwide Governance
Indicators as: the rule of law, corruption-control, regulation
quality, government effectiveness, political stability/no violence,
and voice and accountability. However, these indicators fall short:
they do note emphasize gender equity or pro-poor policies. Writing
from an African feminist scholar-activist perspective, Assata Zerai
emphasizes the voices of women in two ways: (1) she examines how
women's access to ICT makes a difference to the success of
people-centered governance structures; and (2) she demonstrates how
African women's scholarship, too often marginalized, must be used
to expand and redefine the goals and indicators of democratice
governance in African countries. Challenging the status quo that
praises the contributions of cell phones to the diffusion of
knowledge and resultant better governance in Africa, this book is
an important read for scholars of politics and technology, gender
and politics, and African Studies.
Over a decade of qualitative research, Assata Zerai has observed
both incremental moves toward inclusiveness and strategies employed
to accomplish long-term changes while conducting case studies of
five multicultural Protestant churches in sites across the United
States. With an interpretive approach, she explores these centers
of worship and theorizes the conditions under which progressive
social change occurs in some U.S. Protestant congregations.
Understanding the daily practices of change and entrenchment in
Protestant congregations and the intentional work to replace
dominating structures with liberating ones may provide keys to
creating multicultural, antiracist, feminist, and sexually
inclusive volitional communities more broadly. Intersectionality in
Intentional Communities argues that making a significant advance
toward inclusion requires change in the underlying social
structures of racism, sexism, heteronormativity, class, and other
marginalizing influences. In order to isolate this phenomenon,
Zerai conducted fieldwork and archival research among an African
American and four multiracial U.S. churches. Different from a
university or other public institution in which members are legally
required to support diversity and related values, Zerai believes
that volitional communities may provide a best-case scenario for
how, motivated by higher ideals, members may find ways to create
inclusive communities. Zerai's research has a broad empirical base,
encompassing five sites: a largely African American urban
megachurch in the Midwest; a large Midwestern
multiracial/multicultural church; a large urban
multiracial/multicultural church in the eastern United States; a
small, suburban Midwestern multiracial church; and an inclusive
Midwestern college town church. In this book, Zerai further
explores important connections between U.S. Protestant Christian
congregations and political activism.
To understand safe water and sanitation in East Africa, it is
important to consider the contributions of African feminist
analysis. This perspective will unveil inequities in the
distribution of resources, demonstrate how localized solutions
which are driven by women's collaborative work have had an impact
by temporarily easing the burden, and paint a multilayered picture
of the lives of women and girls who are the predominant providers
of water to households. This book explores the effects of water and
sanitation quality and availability on early childhood morbidity in
East Africa from an African feminist sociological perspective. It
presents a framework that considers the ways that the development
industry, neoliberalism, neocolonial relations, gender, class,
ethnicity, globalization, and other dimensions of oppression
intersect to impact upon the experiences and agency of women and
children accessing clean water and safe sanitation and reducing
early childhood morbidity in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. This work
offers a vital contribution to the social scientific literature by
adapting the vibrant intellectual work of African feminists to a
quantitative methodology and enlarging the scope of empirically and
theoretically grounded studies within the field of environmental
sociology.
Over a decade of qualitative research, Assata Zerai has observed
both incremental moves toward inclusiveness and strategies employed
to accomplish long-term changes while conducting case studies of
five multicultural Protestant churches in sites across the United
States. With an interpretive approach, she explores these centers
of worship and theorizes the conditions under which progressive
social change occurs in some U.S. Protestant congregations.
Understanding the daily practices of change and entrenchment in
Protestant congregations and the intentional work to replace
dominating structures with liberating ones may provide keys to
creating multicultural, antiracist, feminist, and sexually
inclusive volitional communities more broadly. Intersectionality in
Intentional Communities argues that making a significant advance
toward inclusion requires change in the underlying social
structures of racism, sexism, heteronormativity, class, and other
marginalizing influences. In order to isolate this phenomenon,
Zerai conducted fieldwork and archival research among an African
American and four multiracial U.S. churches. Different from a
university or other public institution in which members are legally
required to support diversity and related values, Zerai believes
that volitional communities may provide a best-case scenario for
how, motivated by higher ideals, members may find ways to create
inclusive communities. Zerai's research has a broad empirical base,
encompassing five sites: a largely African American urban
megachurch in the Midwest; a large Midwestern
multiracial/multicultural church; a large urban
multiracial/multicultural church in the eastern United States; a
small, suburban Midwestern multiracial church; and an inclusive
Midwestern college town church. In this book, Zerai further
explores important connections between U.S. Protestant Christian
congregations and political activism.
How can we promote people-centered governance in Africa? Cell
phones/ information and communications technology (ICT) are shown
to be linked to neoliberal understandings of more democratic
governance structures, defined by the Worldwide Governance
Indicators as: the rule of law, corruption-control, regulation
quality, government effectiveness, political stability/no violence,
and voice and accountability. However, these indicators fall short:
they do note emphasize gender equity or pro-poor policies. Writing
from an African feminist scholar-activist perspective, Assata Zerai
emphasizes the voices of women in two ways: (1) she examines how
women's access to ICT makes a difference to the success of
people-centered governance structures; and (2) she demonstrates how
African women's scholarship, too often marginalized, must be used
to expand and redefine the goals and indicators of democratice
governance in African countries. Challenging the status quo that
praises the contributions of cell phones to the diffusion of
knowledge and resultant better governance in Africa, this book is
an important read for scholars of politics and technology, gender
and politics, and African Studies.
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