Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria

Men and women participate in collective action for different purposes in northern Nigeria. Field work conducted in six villages show that while men engage in community activities such as road repairs, maintenance of schools and hospitals, refuse collection and maintenance of the traditional village...

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Main Author: Abdulwahid, Saratu
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160341
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author Abdulwahid, Saratu
author_browse Abdulwahid, Saratu
author_facet Abdulwahid, Saratu
author_sort Abdulwahid, Saratu
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Men and women participate in collective action for different purposes in northern Nigeria. Field work conducted in six villages show that while men engage in community activities such as road repairs, maintenance of schools and hospitals, refuse collection and maintenance of the traditional village government, women mobilize around activities such as savings, house and farm work and care giving. It is argued that men mobilize around community activities outside the home because of their public orientation and because they want to maintain their dominance of that space. Women, in contrast, mobilize around activities in keeping with their domestic orientation and traditional roles such as care giving and housework. Religion also influences the extent of women’s participation in collective action. Because men have command of community institutions, they are better able to access the resources embedded in these institutions, but women are able to negotiate within established social structures for better conditions. Given the socio-cultural characteristics of communities in northern Nigeria, an effective strategy for collective action is collaboration between men’s and women’s groups rather than separatism or integration.
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spelling CGSpace1603412025-11-06T05:45:05Z Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria Abdulwahid, Saratu gender poverty collective action community participation social capital Men and women participate in collective action for different purposes in northern Nigeria. Field work conducted in six villages show that while men engage in community activities such as road repairs, maintenance of schools and hospitals, refuse collection and maintenance of the traditional village government, women mobilize around activities such as savings, house and farm work and care giving. It is argued that men mobilize around community activities outside the home because of their public orientation and because they want to maintain their dominance of that space. Women, in contrast, mobilize around activities in keeping with their domestic orientation and traditional roles such as care giving and housework. Religion also influences the extent of women’s participation in collective action. Because men have command of community institutions, they are better able to access the resources embedded in these institutions, but women are able to negotiate within established social structures for better conditions. Given the socio-cultural characteristics of communities in northern Nigeria, an effective strategy for collective action is collaboration between men’s and women’s groups rather than separatism or integration. 2006 2024-11-21T09:50:32Z 2024-11-21T09:50:32Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160341 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Abdulwahid, Saratu. Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria. CAPRi working paper. 0058. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/CAPRiWP58.
spellingShingle gender
poverty
collective action
community participation
social capital
Abdulwahid, Saratu
Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title_full Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title_fullStr Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title_short Gender differences in mobilization for collective action: case studies of villages in Northern Nigeria
title_sort gender differences in mobilization for collective action case studies of villages in northern nigeria
topic gender
poverty
collective action
community participation
social capital
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160341
work_keys_str_mv AT abdulwahidsaratu genderdifferencesinmobilizationforcollectiveactioncasestudiesofvillagesinnorthernnigeria