2002
DOI: 10.1111/1467-7660.00262
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Democratization and State Feminism: Gender Politics in Africa and Latin America

Abstract: This article addresses the link between state feminism and democratization in the global South. The authors use the contrasting cases of Chile and Nigeria to show some of the factors that encourage women to exploit the opportunities presented by transitions to democracy, and link the outcome of state feminism to the strategies and discourses available to women during democratization. Based on evidence from the cases analysed, the authors propose that the strategic options available to women are shaped by at le… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…In Latin America, women protestors often strategically incorporated authoritarian regimes' gendered discourse of women as pious, self-sacrificing mothers into the framing of their own claims against the state. This left authoritarian regimes in the uncomfortable position of justifying the repression of grieving mothers to local and international audiences (Alvarez 1990;Okeke-Ihejirika and Franceschet 2002;Ray and Korteweg 1999). With democratization, however, new political players on both the left and the right used women's own framing of innate gender differences to encourage women's return to the home (Chinchilla 1994;Fisher 1993;Friedman 1998).…”
Section: --American Sociological Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Latin America, women protestors often strategically incorporated authoritarian regimes' gendered discourse of women as pious, self-sacrificing mothers into the framing of their own claims against the state. This left authoritarian regimes in the uncomfortable position of justifying the repression of grieving mothers to local and international audiences (Alvarez 1990;Okeke-Ihejirika and Franceschet 2002;Ray and Korteweg 1999). With democratization, however, new political players on both the left and the right used women's own framing of innate gender differences to encourage women's return to the home (Chinchilla 1994;Fisher 1993;Friedman 1998).…”
Section: --American Sociological Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social movements are more likely to achieve change policy outcomes if tailored to local political discourse, gender ideologies, and cultural contexts; and we propose that MCH policy in Nigeria is a "gendered opportunity structure" for policy in uence [52]. In pre-colonial Nigeria, particularly in Yoruba and Igbo ethnic groups, women had some economic and political in uence strongly linked to their maternal responsibilities, which was further weakened by the colonial period [53]. Maledominated political administrations were implemented by the British colonialism, negating any indigenous female political power and…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Nijeholt, Vargas, and Wieringa (1998) take on agencies in Latin American and the Caribbean, but in single-country studies on Peru (Anderson 1998), Jamaica (McKenzie 1998), Brazil (Pitanguy 1998), Mexico (Lamas 1998), and Chile (Molina 1998). Okeke-Ihejirika and Franceschet (2002) compare state feminism in Africa and Latin America. There have been quite a few monographs of state feminism in certain but not all Latin American countries (see, e.g., Alvarez 1990;Baldez 1991Baldez , 2001Matear 1995;Schild 1995;Lievesley 1996;Waylen 1996;Friedman 2000aFriedman , 2000bFranceschet 2003;Richards 2003Richards , 2004 and some recent work on sub-Saharan African countries (Ghana-Madsen 2010; Cameroon, Mozambique, and Uganda- Tripp, Casimiro, and Kwesiga 2009).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%