2001
DOI: 10.1017/s0022278x01003548
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The politics of autonomy and cooptation in Africa: the case of the Ugandan Women's Movement

Abstract:  State responsiveness to pressures from women's movements in Africa has been limited. However, where inroads have been made, associational autonomy from the state and dominant party has proved critical. The women's movement is one of the most coordinated and active social movements in Uganda, and one of the most effective women's movements in Africa more generally. An important part of its success comes from the fact that it is relatively autonomous, unlike women's movements in earlier periods of Ugand… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Sidelined into supporting political roles in ruling parties and state bureaucracies, women had few opportunities to participate in the allocation of resources or to claim political credit for doing so (Bauer 2011;Fatton 1989;Geisler 2004). Politically active women instead have often had to depend on men to secure their access to patronage, making it difficult for them to build clientele networks that would give them greater influence (Beck 2003;Goetz 2002;Tripp 2000Tripp , 2001. As a result, relatively few women have had the political connections or clientelistic followings needed to successfully negotiate themselves into cabinet positions.…”
Section: The Politics Of Cabinet Appointmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sidelined into supporting political roles in ruling parties and state bureaucracies, women had few opportunities to participate in the allocation of resources or to claim political credit for doing so (Bauer 2011;Fatton 1989;Geisler 2004). Politically active women instead have often had to depend on men to secure their access to patronage, making it difficult for them to build clientele networks that would give them greater influence (Beck 2003;Goetz 2002;Tripp 2000Tripp , 2001. As a result, relatively few women have had the political connections or clientelistic followings needed to successfully negotiate themselves into cabinet positions.…”
Section: The Politics Of Cabinet Appointmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Not surprisingly, some of the earliest studies focused on Uganda. Tamale (1999, p. 194) and Tripp (2001) both underlined the tangible results produced by women members of the Constituent Assembly in securing ‘strong pro‐woman provisions in the 1995 constitution’. At the same time, Tamale warned about the continuing challenges facing women legislators who sought to fulfill a mandate they saw as ‘making a case for women’.…”
Section: African Women Mps' Substantive Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, a manager in the tax administration may 'forgive' a tax collector who is caught taking bribes or embezzling money, because next time he or she may be the one who needs forgiveness (Tripp 2001). This may explain why the quite extensive use of dismissals in the initial phase of the URA has not been sustained (Obwona and Muwonge 2002).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%