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Göteborgs universitets publikationer

Mark är som barn - Genus, fattigdom, och försörjning i Södra Wollo, Etiopien

[with English summary: Our land is like our children - Gendered livelihood strategies in South Wollo, Ethiopia]

Författare och institution:
Kristina Nässén (Institutionen för globala studier, socialantropologi)
ISBN/ISSN:
978-91-628-7865-8
Antal sidor:
236
Publikationstyp:
Doktorsavhandling
Förlag:
Institutionen för globala studier, Socialantropologi, Göteborgs universitet
Förlagsort:
Göteborg
Publiceringsår:
2009
Språk:
svenska
Datum för examination:
2009-10-10
Tidpunkt för examination:
10.15
Lokal:
Sal 326, Annedalsseminariet, Campus Linné, Seminariegatan 1a
Opponent:
Universitetslektor Gunilla Bjerén, Stockholms Universitet
Fulltextlänk:
Sammanfattning (abstract):
This anthropological study examines the complexity and importance of gender relations for livelihood activities and it looks at the way in which female- headed agricultural households in the Ethiopian highlands cope in an area renowned for livelihood vulnerability, drought and famine. It is based on ethnographic fieldwork which was carried out in South Wollo for a year. The thesis explores the many ideas, notions and values that underlie people’s subsistence behaviour and investigates how this is embedded in the context of land policy, economic systems and, importantly, relationships and morality. Relating to others means observing shared norms and values, and the gender order makes particular, morally charged expectations of how women and men of various ages and positions should behave. Gender has important implications for experience, knowledge and cultural conceptions and it is an organizing principle. This thesis shows however that the greatest difference in terms of poverty and vulnerability is not simply that between female-headed households and male-headed households.

The ethnography presented demonstrates that it is relevant in understanding people’s livelihood strategies to consider how several factors work in a complex synergy. It stresses the importance to understand how people acquire resources and which ones they have access to but also to examine the way labour and economic transactions are embedded in social relations. Finally, there are also significant structural factors, such as the state, that nourish or constrain local spheres of action. The thesis shows that it is important to take note of gender differences in relations to key economic resources in local society, particularly in relation to rural development planning.
Ämneskategorier, SVEP:
SAMHÄLLSVETENSKAP ->
Socialvetenskap ->
Socialantrolopologi/etnografi ->
Socialantropologi
Nyckelord:
anthropology, gender, everyday practice, livelihood, exchange, female-headed households, subsistence farming, rural development, Ethiopian highlands, East Africa
Ytterligare information:
[From English summary, starts on p. 229:]

This anthropological study examines the importance of gender relations for livelihood activities and it looks at the way in which female-headed agricultural households in the Ethiopian highlands cope in an area that is renowned for livelihood vulnerability, drought and famine. The material on which this analysis is based was gathered during one year of ethnographic fieldwork in South Wollo.
Postens nummer:
99000
Posten skapad:
2009-09-28 10:48
Posten ändrad:
2009-09-28 10:55

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