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Negotiating Patriarchy and Gender in Africa: Discourses, Practices,
and Policies examines the entrenchment of patriarchy in Africa and
its attendant socioeconomic and political consequences on gender
relations. The contributors analyze the historical and modern ways
in which gender expectations have enabled women in African
societies to be systematically abused and marginalized, from unpaid
labor to poor representation in decision-making areas. Exploring
regions such as rural Uganda, the suburbs of Zimbabwe, the Gold
Coast, South Africa, and Nigeria, contributors incorporate a wide
range of academic theories and disciplines to establish the need
for improved policy implementation on gender issues at both the
local and national government levels in Africa.
Examines key contemporary accounts of the civil war and a range of
subsequent texts to reveal the ideas behind the conflict and how
these frame the understandings of what took place and what it means
for contemporary Nigeria. The Nigeria-Biafra War lasted from 6 July
1966 to 15 January 1970, during which time the post-colonial
Nigerian state fought to bring the South-Eastern region, which had
seceded as the State or Republic of Biafra, back into the newly
independent but ideologically divided nation. This volume discusses
the trends and methodologies in the civil war writings, both
fictional and non-fictional, and is the first to analyse in detail
the intellectual and historical circumstances that helped to shape
these often contentious texts. The recent high-profile fictional
account by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in Half of a Yellow Sun was
preceded by works by Ken Saro-Wiwa, Elechi Amadi, Kole Omotoso,
Wole Soyinka, Flora Nwapa, Buchi Emecheta, Chukwuemeka Ike and
Chris Abani, all of which strongly convey the horrific human cost
of the war on individuals and their communities. The non-fictional
accounts, including Chinua Achebe's last work There Was a Country,
are biographies, personal accounts and essays on the causes and
course of the war, its humanitarian crises and the collaboration of
foreign nations. The contributors examine writers' and
protagonists' use of contemporary published texts as a means of
continued resistance and justification of the war, the problems of
objectivity encountered in memoirs, and how authors' backgrounds
and sources determine thekinds of biases that influenced their
interpretations, including the gendered divisions in Nigeria-Biafra
War scholarship and sources. By initiating a dialogue on the civil
war literature, this volume engages a much-needed discourse on the
problems confronting a culturally diverse post-war Nigeria. Toyin
Falola is the Jacob and Frances Sanger Mossiker Chair in the
Humanities and University Distinguished Teaching Professor at the
University ofTexas at Austin; Ogechukwu Ezekwem is a PhD student in
the Department of History, University of Texas at Austin.
Nigeria's democratisation efforts since attaining political
independence from Britain have been tumultuous and have spanned
over three successive republics. A persistent bug decimating
Nigeria's democracy and repeatedly leading to military coups has
been brazen electoral violence perpetrated by the nation's
political elite. Nigeria's 2019 Democratic Experience analyses and
explains what went wrong in Nigeria's experiment with democracy.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation and the world's seventh most
populous nation, also contributes 70% of West Africa's population.
She is sub-Saharan Africa's largest oil producer and has remained
Africa's largest economy by GDP since 2014. The country has
hundreds of diverse ethnic nationalities and languages grouped into
36 states (or federating units) and an independent federal capital
territory. Though recognized as Africa's largest democracy, her
democratisation process since the 1960s has remained tumultuous
with massive electoral violence and political intolerance. This
repeatedly compelled the military to intervene in the nation's
political history in the years 1966, 1983 and 1985. It is these
developments that provided the motivation for this volume to
capture for posterity the conduct of the 2019 General Elections in
Nigeria.
Although gender and non-gender scholars have studied men, such an
academic exercise requires a critical and focused study of
masculine subjects in particular social contexts, which is what
this book attempts to do. This empirically rich collection of
essays, the seventh of the CODESRIA Gender Series, deals with
critical examinations of various shades and ramifications of
Africa's masculinities and what these portend for the peoples of
Africa and for gender relations in the continent. So much has
changed in terms of notions and expressions of masculinities in
Africa since ancient times, but many aspects of contemporary
masculinities were fashioned during and since the colonial period.
The papers in this volume were initially discussed at the 2005
month-long CODESRIA Gender Institute in Dakar. The contributors are
gender scholars drawn from various disciplines in the wide fields
of the humanities and the social sciences with research interests
in the critical study of men and masculinities in Africa. The
CODESRIA Gender Series aims at keeping alive and nourishing the
African social science knowledge base with insightful research and
debates that challenge conventional wisdom, structures and
ideologies that are narrowly informed by caricatures of gender
realities. The series strives to showcase the best in African
gender research and provide a platform for emerging new talents to
flower.
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