Creating social policy to support women's agency in coercive settings: A case study from Uganda

Global Public Health
Rochelle Burgess, Catherine Campbell

Abstract

Many emphasise the need for policies that support women's agency in highly coercive settings, and the importance of involving target women in public deliberation to inform policy design. The Ugandan Marriage and Divorce Bill seeks to strengthen women's agency in marriage, but has faced many obstacles, including objections from many women themselves in public consultations. We explore key stakeholders' accounts of the difficulties facing the Bill's progress to date, through focus groups with 24 rural and urban men and women, interviews with 14 gender champions in government, non-governmental organisations and legal sectors, and 25 relevant media and radio reports. Thematic analysis revealed an array of representations of the way the Bill's progress was shaped by the public consultation process, the nature of the Ugandan public sphere, the understanding and manipulation of concepts such as 'culture' and 'custom' in public discourse, the impact of economic inequalities on women's understandings of their gendered interests and low women's trust in the law and the political process. We discuss the complexities of involving highly marginalised women in public debates about gender issues and highlight possible implications for concept...Continue Reading

References

Aug 15, 2008·Health Policy and Planning·Gill WaltLucy Gilson
Sep 18, 2009·Journal of Interpersonal Violence·Ilene S Speizer
Mar 2, 2012·BMC International Health and Human Rights·Hayley Macgregor, Elizabeth Mills
Dec 13, 2012·Global Public Health·Susan A PappCatherine Campbell
Aug 21, 2013·Violence Against Women·Leilani FranciscoCharlotte Watts
Sep 4, 2013·Journal of Health Psychology·Catherine Campbell
Jul 10, 2014·Culture, Health & Sexuality·Catherine Campbell, Yugi Nair

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