Class

'Ducktails, Flick-knives and Pugnacity': Subcultural and Hegemonic Masculinities in South Africa, 1948-1960

Citation:

Mooney, Katie. 1998. “‘Ducktails, Flick-knives and Pugnacity’: Subcultural and Hegemonic Masculinities in South Africa, 1948-1960.” Journal of Southern African Studies 24: 753–74.

Author: Katie Mooney

Abstract:

The Ducktails were a white youth gang subculture that emerged within post Second World War South Africa. They were rebellious, hedonistic, apolitical and displayed little respect for the law, education or work. Collectively their identity was shaped by specific racial, class and gender elements. Within gender studies, femininity has been at the forefront whereas investigations into masculinities have rarely featured. This article contributes towards a better understanding of masculinity and particularly white masculine identities within an historical context. Particular attention is given to the way male members of the subculture constructed, sustained and practiced their masculinity. Specifically, this article argues that Ducktail masculinity was not static or homogeneous but was rather multifarious, embracing characteristics such as image, territoriality, loyalty, pugnacity, competitiveness, virility and homophobia. This sets the context for an exploration of the relationship of conformity, conflict and control that emerged between Ducktail masculinity and other more accepted and dominant masculinities.

Topics: Age, Youth, Class, Gender, Men, Boys, Masculinity/ies, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Hierarchies, Race, Sexuality, Violence Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: South Africa

Year: 1998

Violence and Dalit Women’s Resistance in Rural Bihar

Citation:

Srivastava, Sumit S. 2007. “Violence and Dalit Women’s Resistance in Rural Bihar.” Indian Anthropologist 37 (2): 31–44.

Author: Sumit S. Srivastava

Abstract:

The present study analyses the participation of dalit women in the naxalite movement in Bihar as a strategy of their empowerment and liberation from gender exploitation and patriarchy. The overlapping categories of caste along with class are of prime importance in our study. The broad objectives of the study are to explore experiences of violence and in response to it the nature and viability of gendering naxalite movement in Bihar. Such modes of resistance encounter different set of oppression and sites. The issues of participation are those of equal land rights and recourse to retaliation in cases of violation of dignity and violence. Similarly, the 'othering' of dalit women seen in the targeted killings of these women in massacres by landed gentry is also explored. In conclusion, the study argues that there are multiple forms of violence which require that gender and violence to be critically interpreted in the framework of caste. Most importantly, the resistance to violence by dalit women in Bihar aims to negotiate sexual exploitation and patriarchy thereby enhancing their functionalities to the optimum.

Keywords: Bihar, violence, Dalit women, Naxalite movement

Topics: Caste, Class, Gender, Women, Girls, Gender-Based Violence, Gendered Power Relations, Patriarchy, Sexual Violence, Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, Violence Regions: Asia, South Asia Countries: India

Year: 2007

The Women's Movement in the Philippines

Citation:

Friesen, Dorothy. 1989. "The Women's Movement in the Philippines." NWSA Journal 1 (4): 676-88.

Author: Dorothy Friesen

Abstract:

Characterizes women's movement in the Philippines. Contributions of the women's movement in the country on international feminism; Historical influences to the country's women's movement; Social conditions of women in the country. (EBSCO)

Topics: Class, Feminisms, Gender, Women, Nationalism, NGOs Regions: Asia, Southeast Asia Countries: Philippines

Year: 1989

Zimbabwe: State, Class, and Gendered Models of Land Resettlement

Citation:

Jacobs, Susie. 1990. “Zimbabwe: State, Class, and Gendered Models of Land Resettlement.” In Women and the State in Africa, edited by Jane L. Parpart and Kathleen A. Staudt, 161–84. London: Lynne Rienner.

Author: Susie Jacobs

Topics: Class, Gender, Governance, Rights, Land Rights Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: Zimbabwe

Year: 1990

Land and the Economic Empowerment of Women: A Gendered Analysis

Citation:

Gaidzanwa, Rudo. 1995. “Land and the Economic Empowerment of Women: A Gendered Analysis.” Southern African Feminist Review 1 (1): 1–12.

Author: Rudo Gaidzanwa

Abstract:

This paper focuses on the gender dimension of the land and indigenization debate in order to illustrate the problems relating to aggregated claims to land rights, as well as the potential and actual threats to sustainability, efficiency, and productivity which such analyses pose for the livelihood of poor rural and urban women in Zimbabwe. After a review of the literature on land issues the paper proceeds to differentiate types of land - urban residential land, commercial and industrial land, and resettlement land - and the related politics in order to understand better what the debates on land reform mean for men and women of different races and classes in Zimbabwe. Given that Zimbabwe's economy is not likely to divert dramatically from its dependence on manufacturing and agriculture as major contributors to the gross domestic product, it is imperative that policymakers address the question of black peoples', and in particular, women's relationships to all types of land. This would move the land debate forward from its present fixation on the ownership of arable land to issues of access to and control of such land in the short and medium term. (Abstract from AfricaBib.org)

Topics: Class, Economies, Gender, Gender Analysis, Women, Governance, Indigenous, Livelihoods, Race, Rights, Land Rights, Women's Rights Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: Zimbabwe

Year: 1995

Gender, Land and Labour Relations and Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa in the Era of Economic Liberalisation: Towards a Research Agenda

Citation:

Tsikata, Dzodzi. 2009. “Gender, Land and Labour Relations and Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa in the Era of Economic Liberalisation: Towards a Research Agenda.” Feminist Africa, no. 12, 11-30.

Author: Dzodzi Tsikata

Abstract:

The promotion of secure livelihoods rooted in equitable and viable land and labour systems is a longstanding concern which has become even more urgent in the present conjuncture of global food, fuel and financial crises. These crises have exposed once again the challenges of making a living – jobless economic growth; the growth of the informal economy and informal, casual and poorly paid work; land tenure and labour insecurities and poor livelihood outcomes for the majority of people in Africa. Even more critically, the crises have highlighted the different experiences of people on the basis of the permutations of their different identities, social relations and situations – region, country, citizenship, migration status, rural or urban location, class, gender, kinship and generation. This is not unexpected given that these markers are also those which structure access to and control of livelihood resources including labour. What is unexpected is the long-term failure to take these differences into account in policy making. While recognising all these differences, it is the gendered nature of land and labour relations in the making of livelihoods which is the focus of this article. This article argues that land tenure and labour issues have often been discussed separately. As a result, two insufficiently interconnected bodies of literature have been generated which offer useful but partial insights into the implications of gender inequalities in labour relations and resource tenures for women’s livelihoods. The article demonstrates the need to make conceptual linkages between land and labour issues and draws attention to some literature which does so. This is on the basis that such an approach is critical for policy efforts to tackle the enormous livelihood challenges facing sub-Saharan Africa’s women in both rural and urban areas in the era of economic liberalisation.

Topics: Class, Economies, Gender, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Land Tenure, Governance, Livelihoods, Political Economies, Rights, Land Rights Regions: Africa

Year: 2009

Securing Land and Property Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Role of Local Institutions

Citation:

Toulmin, Camilla. 2009. “Securing Land and Property Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Role of Local Institutions.” Land Use Policy 26 (1): 10–9. doi:10.1016/j.landusepol.2008.07.006.

Author: Camilla Toulmin

Abstract:

Central governments have neither the capacity nor the local knowledge to implement a just, large-scale national land registration system. Support to local institutions to undertake intermediate forms of land registration has been shown to be far more effective in many places—although these need careful checks on abuses by powerful local (and external) interests, measures to limit disputes (too many of which can overwhelm any institution) and measures to ensure that the needs of those with the least power – typically women, migrants, tenants and pastoralists – are given due weight. These locally grounded systems can also provide the foundation for more formal registration systems, as needs and government capacities develop. Even if there are the funds and the institutional capacity to provide formal land title registration to everyone in ways that are fair and that recognize local diversity and complexity, and could manage disputes, this may often not be needed. For the vast majority of people, cheaper, simpler, locally grounded systems of rights registration can better meet their needs for secure tenure.

Topics: Class, Land Tenure, Governance, Rights, Land Rights, Property Rights Regions: Africa

Year: 2009

Livestock and the Rangeland Commons in South Africa’s Land and Agrarian Reform

Citation:

Hall, Ruth, and Ben Cousins. 2013. “Livestock and the Rangeland Commons in South Africa’s Land and Agrarian Reform.” African Journal of Range & Forage Science 30 (1-2): 11–15. doi:10.2989/10220119.2013.768704.

Authors: Ruth Hall, Ben Cousins

Abstract:

Land and agrarian reform has the potential to expand South Africa's rangeland commons and enhance their contribution to the livelihoods of the rural poor, yet to a large extent this has been an opportunity missed. Shifting policy agendas have prioritised private land rights and commercial land uses, seeking to dismantle the racial divide between the white commercial farming areas and the ex-Bantustans by allocating former white farms to black farmers. These agendas and planning models reflect class and gender bias and a poor understanding of common property. If reform policies are to contribute to the reduction of high levels of rural poverty and inequality, then greater recognition of the potential role of livestock production on the commons must inform policy and planning.

Keywords: communal rangelands, land reform, livestock, natural resource management, South Africa

Topics: Class, Economies, Economic Inequality, Poverty, Gender, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Households, Livelihoods, Political Economies, Race, Rights, Land Rights, Property Rights Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: South Africa

Year: 2013

Gender and Land Reform: The Zimbabwe Experience

Citation:

Goebel, Allison. 2005. Gender and Land Reform: The Zimbabwe Experience. Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Author: Allison Goebel

Abstract:

Zimbabwe's nationalist and post-colonial ambitions have been largely defined by land reform. Allison Goebel assesses Zimbabwe's successes and failures in incorporating gender issues into the broader project of land redistribution. Based on fieldwork in the Sengezi resettlement area in east central Zimbabwe in the late 1990s and 2002, Gender and Land Reform situates gender within the larger issues of race, class, and international political economy. Goebel examines the social forces and effects of the resettlement process, including state policy and legislation, customary norms and practices, local institutions, and ideologies and cosmologies. Her study emphasizes the strategic choices women make in new institutional and household contexts and considers the interests of poor women who have been marginalized within the land reform process. (Abstract from book description)

Annotation:

Quotes:

“However, as this article will show, the hotly debated negotiations of women’s status and gender relations are part and parcel of current debates and practices regarding land reform, both at the level of state discourse, laws and policies, and at the level of communities and households in rural areas. Further, negotiations of gender parallel and are linked with other post-colonial negotiations of power along race and class lines.” (146)

“Women, particularly rural peasant women, form another group subject to certain types of exclusion, which have been accompanied by gender-specific discursive justification. This paper attempts to unravel the nature of this exclusion by examining the implications for rural women and gender in the evolving land reform process. I look specifically at (1) the emerging opportunities and constraints for small-scale women farmers of ‘fast track’ and beyond particularly as represented by state policy and practice, (2) the role of traditional authorities and the re-emergence of ‘culture’ in land allocation and administration and (3) the inter-relationships between these two. I apply a feminist materialist perspective, but as informed by post-structuralist feminist analysis to these interrelationships. This analysis interrogates the nature and role of the state as agent of gender transformation, the importance of discourses and flows of power at and between the locations of households, communities and the state and its local agents, while at the same time flagging the crucial material underpinnings of rural women’s position and opportunities, especially as they relate to arable land. Through this analysis, important contours of cultural transformation in a case of post-colonial economic and political change are revealed. First, however, details of the land crisis are outlined.” (147)

“Zimbabwe’s land reform process has so far had contradictory effects for women.” (152)

“The tenuousness of women’s relationship to resettlement land must also be understood through the lens of culture and ritual, particularly through the ways in which ‘tradition’ is being deployed in the resettlement context. Chiefs have no formal authority in the resettlement areas of the 1980s and 1990s and these areas do not have local institutions associated with tradition, such as headmen. Also, resettlement villages are not arranged according to lineage groups. Nevertheless, aspects of traditional culture such as family ancestor appeasement and bringing home the dead (kurova gova) are commonly practised. These practices enact and express a cosmology that understands the environs as populated by and under the care of ancestral spirits. The practices also reinforce patrilineal control of land and hence distance women from the possibility of controlling land in their own right.” (153)

“The promotion of women’s rights to land therefore cannot be only a political project of the state (e.g. a question of resettlement policy and laws), but must incorporate the insight that such a promotion is a profound challenge to a living cultural tradition that understands land and the environment as a key element of hegemonic masculinity and patriarchy. “ (154)

“Regrettably, there is little fieldwork-based evidence to draw on to tell us about the experience of women since 1998.” (156)

“The Zimbabwean experience indicates the centrality of the conflict between African customary practice and a modern rights-based legal framework in relation to women’s land rights. While the Zimbabwean government clearly has not been as committed to the inclusion of equality rights for women as the South African state appears to be, both states face a similar post-colonial challenge. They are both attempting to forge a nationalist land reform process from within a colonial legacy of a dual legal system and historical race-based injustice, in a contemporary context within which ‘tradition’ and ‘culture’ play central roles in how many men struggle for identity and power. Meanwhile, many women demand equal rights and opportunities, utilizing a modern understanding of equality rights.” (159)

Topics: Class, Coloniality/Post-Coloniality, Economies, Poverty, Gender, Women, Governance, Households, Livelihoods, Political Economies, Race, Rights, Land Rights, Property Rights, Women's Rights Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: Zimbabwe

Year: 2005

Women, Armed Conflict, and Peacemaking in Sri Lanka: Toward a Political Economy Perspective

Citation:

Bandarage, Asoka. 2010. “Women, Armed Conflict, and Peacemaking in Sri Lanka: Toward a Political Economy Perspective.” Asian Politics & Policy 2 (4): 653–67.

Author: Asoka Bandarage

Abstract:

This article discusses women's roles as victims, perpetrators, and peacemakers in armed conflicts in contemporary Sri Lanka. It covers such phenomena as rape as a weapon of war, women IDPs, “war widows,” female-headed households, women suicide bombers, mothers for peace, and feminist peace activism. The article points out that aggression and victimization need to be understood as occurring across ethnicity and gender as well as within ethnic and gender groups. Contributing toward a political economy perspective, the article considers the complex intersection of gender, ethnicity, caste, and social class within the confluence of local, regional, and international forces. The article concludes by emphasizing the need to broaden the social class and local bases of feminist peace activism and to formulate an integrated gender-, ethnicity- and class-sensitive policy agenda for postconflict development in Sri Lanka.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Caste, Class, Combatants, Female Combatants, Displacement & Migration, IDPs, Ethnicity, Feminisms, Gender, Women, Households, Peace Processes, Political Economies, Sexual Violence, Rape Regions: Asia, South Asia Countries: Sri Lanka

Year: 2010

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