Type | Book Section - The status of women and the welcoming of family members from outside the nuclear family in Africa: the cases of Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal |
Title | Women and Families: Evolution of the Status of Women as Factor and Consequence of Changes in Family Dynamics |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1997 |
Page numbers | 225-252 |
URL | http://www.cicred.org/Eng/Publications/Books/Unesco1997/UnescoWakam.pdf |
Abstract | The lineage family in Africa is generally presented as a patriarchal structure particularly oppressive for the African woman, which tends to promote her submission and exploitation for the benefit of men. The Western type of nuclear family is presented and perceived as an ideal model which can ensure her greater freedom and happiness. Certain evolutionary sociologists such as T. Parsons (1955) and W. Goode (1963) have even seen this model as one towards which all family models are bound to converge under the effect of "modernisation", a process of which women’s emancipation is a part. Moreover, the emergence of women as household heads in Africa is being talked about more and more (Tichit, 1994). And this access of women to the status of household head is to a greater or lesser degree seen as a sign of increased autonomy and independence from the extended family (Pilon, 1994). As a consequence there is reason to wonder what is the behavior of female heads of households with regard to welcoming members of the extended family within the nuclear family, notably as their socioeconomic status improves. Do they continue to conform to traditional values concerning the welcoming of other members of the extended family or do they take this opportunity to "emotionally and economically nuclearise their families" (Caldwell and Caldwell, 1987)? The objective of this study is to answer these questions while attempting to compare the behavior of these women with that of their male counterparts. |
» | Cameroon - Deuxième Recensement Général de la Population et de l'Habitat 1987 |