“…Other African-centric studies on female economic participation that this study departs from have focussed on: gender discrimination in land ownership (Ajala, 2017); women and gender in English-speaking Sub-Saharan Africa (Ampofo et al , 2004); researching African women and gender studies (Ampofo et al , 2008); rethinking the feminization of poverty (Chant, 2006); the feminization of poverty (Chant, 2008); African feminist studies (Lewis, 2002); women’s studies in Africa (Mama, 1996); gender studies in Africa at crossroads (Nzomo, 1998); gender identity (Stoller, 1964); sex and gender on development (Stoller, 1968); oil transnational corporations, environmental sustainability and corporate social responsibility (CSR) (Edoho, 2018); nexuses between governance, inequality, globalization, information technology and female economic participation (Efobi et al , 2018; Asongu and Odhiambo, 2018, 2020a, 2020b, 2020c, 2020d; Asongu et al , 2020a, 2020b); CSR and Chinese oil and gas multinationals in the oil and gas industry of Nigeria (Ekhator, 2014); effect of CSR on advancement of women in small-scale fisheries of Sub-Saharan Africa (Uduji and Okolo-Obasi, 2018c); the skepticisms of interested parties on MOCs CSR initiatives in Nigeria (Eweje, 2007); the dishonest improvement promise of CSR of MOCs (Frynas, 2005); CSR of MOCs in the HIV/AIDS response (Uduji et al , 2019c); reinventing the wheels of CSR practices in the oil industry of Nigeria (Idemudia, 2007); Shell’s input towards sustainable community development in the Niger Delta of Nigeria (Ite, 2006); CSR inventiveness in Nigeria and rural women livestock keepers in oil-host communities (Uduji and Okolo-Obasi, 2018d); CSR input towards human development (Lompo and Trani, 2013); CSR and disparity in the Niger Delta of Nigeria (Renouard and Lado, 2012); CSR and the role of women in sustainable improvement in agricultural in Sub-Saharan Africa (Uduji et al , 2019b) and customers’ experience with self-service technologies in Nigeria (Ugwuanyi et al , 2020).…”