“…The relationship between rurality, gender and education is complex not least because it is often viewed through the lens of urban realities or through hegemonic gender discourses that privilege interpretations from the Global North (Arnot and Fennell 2008). Empirical research on gender and rurality, for example, is often focused on advanced economies such as New Zealand (Powell, Taylor, and Smith 2013), Australia (Pini, Price, and McDonald 2010) and Norway (Haugen and Lysgård 2006). From such perspectives, not only are rural families in the Global South seen as the most disadvantaged but, from a gender perspective, they are often portrayed as the most hidebound by oppressive patriarchal traditions (Kenway, Kraack, and Hickey Moodey 2006;Connell 2007).…”