Gender Attitudes in Africa: Liberal Egalitarianism Across 34 Countries

Abstract This study provides a first descriptive mapping of support for women’s equal rights in 34 African countries and assesses diverse theoretical explanations for variability in this support. Contrary to stereotypes of a homogeneously tradition-bound continent, African citizens report high level...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social forces 2020-09, Vol.99 (1), p.86-125
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description Abstract This study provides a first descriptive mapping of support for women’s equal rights in 34 African countries and assesses diverse theoretical explanations for variability in this support. Contrary to stereotypes of a homogeneously tradition-bound continent, African citizens report high levels of agreement with gender equality that are more easily understood with reference to global processes of ideational diffusion than to country-level differences in economic modernization or women’s public-sphere roles. Multivariate analyses suggest, however, that gender liberalism in Africa may be spreading through mechanisms not typically considered by world-society scholars: Support for equal rights is largely unrelated to countries’ formal ties to the world system, but it is stronger among persons who are more exposed to extra-local culture, including through internet and mobile phone usage, news access, and urban residency. Forces for gender liberalism are conditioned, moreover, by local religious cultures and gender structures.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects Access
Attitudes
Demographic aspects
Diffusion
Egalitarianism
Equality
Female roles
Gender
Gender equality
Gender inequality
Information dissemination
Internet
Liberalism
Local culture
Mobile phones
Modernization
Social science research
Stereotypes
Women
Women's rights
Womens rights
title Gender Attitudes in Africa: Liberal Egalitarianism Across 34 Countries
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