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African Market Women and Economic Power The Role of Women in African Economic Development
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Edited by Bessie House-Midamba and Felix K. Ekechi
ISBN: 0-313-29214-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-29214-9
240 pages, maps, tables
Greenwood Press
Publication: 1/30/1995
List Price: $126.95 (UK Sterling Price: £70.00)
Availability:
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies
Series Number: 174
Reviews:
  • Most literature on women in African development discusses the role of women in West African societies. One of the principal virtues of this collection is that it examines women in West, East, and Southern Africa. There are ten essays in all, many of them with useful tables and maps. The time frame encompasses the pre-colonial, colonial, and independent periods. Contributors highlight the many ways in which African women have adapted and changed over the decades as they have found new means to remain viable in the economies of their countries. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty.

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Description: An interdisciplinary study of market women from all parts of Africa shows how, from historical times to the present, African women have used the economic power they have derived from market activities and commercial enterprises to improve their social and political status in a man's world. They used their wealth in pre-colonial times to obtain titles and even chieftainship. Because of their involvement in trade, many women acquired considerable property, especially real estate. The authors stress the positive aspect of women's economic activities, but also point out the prevalent sexual division of labor in Africa as a limiting factor. They illustrate the concomitant struggle between men and women over certain market items traditionally associated with one or the other sex. They analyze the cultural, social, and economic barriers that restrict female involvement in some economic activities. Nevertheless, the overwhelming conclusion by all of the writers, who are Africans and Americans, is that women play a major role in the economic sector of all the regions of the continent.
Table of Contents:
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction by Bessie House-Midamba and Felix K. Ekechi
  • Esan Women Traders and Pre-Colonial Economic Power by Onaiwu W. Ogbomo
  • Gender, Business, and Space Control: Yoruba Market Women and Power by Toyin Falola
  • Gender and Economic Power: The Case of Igbo Market Women of Eastern Nigeria by Felix K. Ekechi
  • Muslim Women Traders of Northern Nigeria: Perspectives from the City of Yola by Catherine VerEecke
  • Kikuyu Market Women Traders and the Struggle for Economic Empowerment in Kenya by Bessie House-Midamba
  • Comparative Advantage: Women in Trade in Accra, Ghana, and Nairobi, Kenya by Claire Robertson
  • Baganda Women's Night Market Activities by Nakanyike B. Musisi
  • Women's Fresh Produce Marketing in Harare, Zimbabwe: Motivations for Women's Participation and Implications for Development by Nancy E. Horn
  • Trade, Economy and Family in Urban Zimbabwe by Mary Johnson Osirim
  • The Growth and Dynamics of Women Entrepreneurs in Southern Africa by Jeanne Downing
  • Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 94-21082
LCC Class: HQ1240
Dewey Class: 381
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