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Bill Carman

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TECHNOLOGY, GENDER, AND POWER IN AFRICA
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538.GIF TECHNOLOGY, GENDER, AND POWER IN AFRICA

Patricia Stamp

IDRC 1990
ISBN Out of print
e-ISBN 1-55250-320-8
195 pp.

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This book demonstrates that the study of gender relations and the power of women is central to an evaluation of development efforts in Africa. The interactive relationship between technology transfer and gender factors is explored using case studies and examples from the development literature on agriculture, health, and nutrition, as well as from feminist scholarship on Africa. Faulty approaches to the topic and biases at all levels of policy-making have led to ineffective or even harmful projects. Insights about the significance of gender factors do not easily cross the boundaries between different fields of inquiry. 

Part I presents the different conceptual frameworks within which the topic has been considered. The fields of African studies, women's studies, and development studies are critiqued, and useful approaches are identified. The invisibility of gender in development studies and aid practice is explored at length. Part II examines the research findings of African women to identify the factors that either render women powerless and/or disadvantaged or create the conditions for their authoritative participation in development. Part III identifies issues and inter-relations that have not been addressed in previous research and suggests promising ways to frame future research on women and technology in Africa. The social, economic,and technical empowerment of women at the community level is seen as vital to effective development efforts.

Prev Book(s) 271 of 271

 Document(s)

Foreword Eva M. Rathgeber 1990


Preface 1990


Acknowledgements 1990


Introduction 1990


Part I. Conceptual frameworks

1. The Fields of Knowledge
1990


2. Conceptualizing technology, gender and development 1990


Part II: Technology Transfer: Gender and Power in the Village and Family

3. Technology, gender and development in Africa: the findings
1990


4. Feminist political economy 1990


Part III. New approaches

5. New issues in technology, gender, and development
1990


6. Conceptual Problems in the Study of Women in Development 1990


7. Framing future research 1990


References 1990


Acronyms and abbreviations 1990




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