Women and Collective Action in Africa: Development, Democratization, and Empowerment, with Special Focus on Sierra Leone

Author:   F. Steady
Publisher:   Palgrave USA
ISBN:  

9781403970824


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   13 December 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Women and Collective Action in Africa: Development, Democratization, and Empowerment, with Special Focus on Sierra Leone


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Author:   F. Steady
Publisher:   Palgrave USA
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.504kg
ISBN:  

9781403970824


ISBN 10:   1403970823
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   13 December 2005
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Here is yet another remarkable intervention by Filomena Steady, adding to her widely used scholarship on gender and feminism. Using Freetown, Sierra Leone, as a detail, Steady unfolds the agenda of an array of local women's organizations comparing them to their counterparts at regional, continental and international levels. Eloquently and persuasively, Steady demonstrates how women have utilized collective action to influence development. She advocates the building of alliances with other movements continentally and internationally for the transformation of a corporate controlled global economy, without which gender justice is an illusion. --Micere Githae Mugo, African American Studies, Syracuse University <br> Women and Collective Action in Africa fills an important space in the women's movements literature because it is African centered, comparative, interdisciplinary, and directly attuned to the needs and experiences of women from Africa and those from the Global South. The goal


'Here is yet another remarkable intervention by Filomena Steady, adding to her widely used scholarship on gender and feminism. Using Freetown, Sierra Leone, as a detail, Steady unfolds the agenda of an array of local women's organizations comparing them to their counterparts at regional, continental and international levels. Eloquently and persuasively, Steady demonstrates how women have utilized collective action to influence development. She advocates the building of alliances with other movements continentally and internationally for the transformation of a corporate controlled global economy, without which gender justice is an illusion.' - Micere Githae Mugo, African American Studies, Syracuse University 'Women and Collective Action in Africa fills an important space in the women's movements literature because it is African centered, comparative, interdisciplinary, and directly attuned to the needs and experiences of women from Africa and those from the Global South. The goal is for African women leaders, associations, and activists to understand the essential elements of their own feminisms, African feminisms, as they address their own histories and their own situations.' - Lynn Bolles, Professor of Women's Studies, Affiliate Faculty Anthropology, African American Studies, Comparative Literature and American Studies, University of Maryland College Park 'Revisiting development and feminist theories with great insight, this original work by a pioneer of African gender/women's studies argues for theoretical frameworks that take into account local socioeconomic conditions and cultural imperatives. Writing forcefully with great clarity, Professor Steady offers new ideas and refreshing interpretations that expand the boundaries of knowledge. This accessible work is indeed a welcome addition to the study of African women and social movements.' - Obioma Nnaemeka, Professor of French and Women's Studies, Indiana University, Indianapolis, and President of the Association of African Women Scholars.


Here is yet another remarkable intervention by Filomena Steady, adding to her widely used scholarship on gender and feminism. Using Freetown, Sierra Leone, as a detail, Steady unfolds the agenda of an array of local women's organizations comparing them to their counterparts at regional, continental and international levels. Eloquently and persuasively, Steady demonstrates how women have utilized collective action to influence development. She advocates the building of alliances with other movements continentally and internationally for the transformation of a corporate controlled global economy, without which gender justice is an illusion. --Micere Githae Mugo, African American Studies, Syracuse University Women and Collective Action in Africa fills an important space in the women's movements literature because it is African centered, comparative, interdisciplinary, and directly attuned to the needs and experiences of women from Africa and those from the Global South. The goal is for African women leaders, associations, and activists to understand the essential elements of their own feminisms, African feminisms, as they address their own histories and their own situations. --Lynn Bolles, Professor of Women's Studies, Affiliate Faculty Anthropology, African American Studies, Comparative Literature and American Studies, University of Maryland College Park Revisiting development and feminist theories with great insight, this original work by a pioneer of African gender/women's studies argues for theoretical frameworks that take into account local socioeconomic conditions and cultural imperatives. Writing forcefully with great clarity, Professor Steady offers new ideas and refreshing interpretations that expand the boundaries of knowledge. This accessible work is indeed a welcome addition to the study of African women and social movements. --Obioma Nnaemeka, Professor of French and Women's Studies, Indiana University, Indianapolis, and President of the Association of African Women Scholars.


Here is yet another remarkable intervention by Filomena Steady, adding to her widely used scholarship on gender and feminism. Using Freetown, Sierra Leone, as a detail, Steady unfolds the agenda of an array of local women' s organizations comparing them to their counterparts at regional, continental and international levels. Eloquently and persuasively, Steady demonstrates how women have utilized collective action to influence development. She advocates the building of alliances with other movements continentally and internationally for the transformation of a corporate controlled global economy, without which gender justice is an illusion. --Micere Githae Mugo, African American Studies, Syracuse University Women and Collective Action in Africa fills an important space in the women' s movements literature because it is African centered, comparative, interdisciplinary, and directly attuned to the needs and experiences of women from Africa and those from the Global South. The goal is for African women leaders, associations, and activists to understand the essential elements of their own feminisms, African feminisms, as they address their own histories and their own situations. --Lynn Bolles, Professor of Women's Studies, Affiliate Faculty Anthropology, African American Studies, Comparative Literature and American Studies, University of Maryland College Park<br> Revisiting development and feminist theories with great insight, this original work by a pioneer of African gender/women' s studies argues for theoretical frameworks that take into account local socioeconomic conditions and cultural imperatives. Writing forcefully withgreat clarity, Professor Steady offers new ideas and refreshing interpretations that expand the boundaries of knowledge. This accessible work is indeed a welcome addition to the study of African women and social movements. --Obioma Nnaemeka, Professor of French and Women' s Studies, Indiana University, Indianapolis, and President of the Association of African Women Scholars. <br>


Author Information

FILOMINA STEADY is Professor and Chair of Africana Studies at Wellesley College, USA.

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