非洲妇女在政治中的重新定位:从临界质量到临界行为

Q4 Arts and Humanities AGENDA Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/10130950.2022.2107941
A. Shangare, Cori Wielenga
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引用次数: 1

摘要

通过非洲联盟(非盟)的性别议程实施了平权行动,以实现妇女的政治赋权,并在非盟内部和成员国实现性别公正目标。因此,配额被用作快速通道手段,以确保增加妇女在政治中的代表性和参与,从而实现商定的性别平等和将政策目标纳入主流。文献,特别是与非洲有关的文献,倾向于关注政治机构中妇女“数量”的增加,而不是将批判性的注意力转向妇女政治参与和代表性所带来的变革的质量。文章问,非洲妇女参与政治决策机构意味着什么?文章通过对非盟性别政策制定者和执行者的采访,探讨了政治代表性(批评行为)可能只具有象征性价值的方式,而不是走向实质性代表性,妇女的政治行动会产生影响和影响力。它质疑女性在实质性参与方面受到阻碍的方式,包括通过被微妙地削弱和边缘化,例如通过身体羞辱或以男性同行很少有的方式对其私生活的各个方面进行审查。文章认为非盟性别政策作为促进非洲大陆妇女政治参与的一种手段的重要性,并提出了女权主义宣传问题,这可能会使妇女在政治中象征性。在非盟内外,妇女继续在这个有影响力的区域机构内和通过这个机构倡导赋予妇女政治权力,该机构的性别政策为非洲大陆其他地区的政策提供了信息。
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Repositioning African women in politics: From critical mass to critical acts
abstract Affirmative action has been implemented through the African Union’s (AU) gender agenda to attain women’s political empowerment and to achieve gender justice goals both within the AU and by member states. Accordingly, quotas are used as the fast track means to ensure the increase in representation and participation of women in politics to achieve agreed gender parity and mainstreaming policy goals. Literature, particularly in relation to Africa, has tended to focus on the increased ‘quantity’ of women in political institutions rather than turning critical attention to the quality of change experienced as a result of women’s political participation and representation. The article asks what does it mean for African women to participate in the institutions of political decision-making? Drawing from interviews with gender policy makers and implementers at the AU, the article examines the ways in which political representation (critical acts) may have no more than symbolic value, instead of moving towards substantive representation in which women’s political actions have consequences and weight. It questions the ways in which women are hindered from substantive participation, including through being subtly undermined and marginalised, for example, through body-shaming or bringing aspects of their private lives under scrutiny in ways their male counterparts rarely are. The article considers the importance of the AU’s gender policy as a means to advance women’s political participation on the continent and raises the problem of feminist advocacy which has the potential to tokenise women in politics. Within the AU, and outside of it, women continue to advocate for women’s political empowerment in and through this influential regional body, whose gender policies inform those of the rest of the continent.
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