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In the twenty-first century, gender responsive budgeting (GRB) has
emerged as a development tool that explores if and how gender
equality goals and targets are being effectively supported through
government funding. Gender Responsive Budgeting in Practice:
Lessons from Nigeria and Selected Developing Countries argues that,
although justified by the high costs of gender inequality to
economic growth and development, the use of GRB as a tool to
further global and regional gender equality goals has seen little
progress in the twenty-first century, especially in developing
countries. Through analyses of budgets and the budgeting process in
Nigeria from 2000-2020, the contributors analyze why GRB has failed
to gain traction or yield success in developing countries. Using
these analyses, the contributors identify critical success factors
that are missing in the developing world and must be enacted in
order to further and facilitate inclusive growth and sustainable
development.
In this edited volume, Nigerian scholars from a variety of
disciplines examine the relationship between gender and Nigeria's
pathways of development in the last 100 years of its nationhood.
This analysis is set against the background of unequal power
dynamics between women and men, and specifically the ways in which
social, cultural, political, and economic construction of gender
has influenced Nigeria's course of development through her colonial
and post-colonial history. The influence of the nature of economic
governance, policy, and institutional frameworks, the nature of
resource availability and (re)distribution between women and men in
terms of goods and services, knowledge and skills, policies and
budgets, and the outcomes and impacts for women and men are seen in
terms of women's economic empowerment, equal participation and
development benefits. This rich collection of empirical works
therefore provides not just the rhetoric but the evidence to indict
gender power relations in Nigeria, especially at the institutional
level. This volume unpacks and explores this recurrent problem with
a the goal of identifying new pathways for gender relations.
Sustainable development is now intricately linked not just to
economic growth, but more importantly, to the quality of life of
people in terms of their social status, political participation,
cultural freedom, environmental justice and inclusive development.
For previously colonized nations like Nigeria, these linkages are
believed to have been influenced by the legacies of colonial rule,
positively or otherwise. Through the Gender Lens: A Century of
Social and Political Development in Nigeria looks at how
colonialism has enabled or hindered the roles of the state in
promoting inclusive development in general, and gender equality, in
particular, in the process of nation building. In this edited
volume, scholars analyze a host of policies, strategies and
programs, as well as empirical evidence, to expose how types of
governance - from direct colonial rule in the country from 1914,
through her independence in 1960, a Republic in 1963, and to
different post-independence governance periods - have influenced
gender relations, and the impacts of these on Nigerian women.
Diverse sectoral perspectives from education, health, culture,
environment, and especially politics, are presented to explain the
level of attainment (or otherwise) of gender equality and the
implications for Nigeria's road to sustainable development. The
emphasis on the role of the state in development particularly
indicts the social and political domains of governance. Hence, the
main focus of inquiry in the volume. In its twelve chapters, the
authors analyze available data and other information to draw
relevant conclusions, identify lessons of experience, including
from some cross-country comparisons, and make concrete
recommendations for more gender-inclusive systems of governance in
the next century of Nigeria's nationhood.
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