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Mobile phones, gender, and female empowerment in sub-Saharan Africa : studies with African youth.

Porter, Gina and Hampshire, Kate and Abane, Albert and Munthali, Alister and Robson, Elsbeth and De Lannoy, Ariane and Tanle, Augustine and Owusu, Samuel (2020) 'Mobile phones, gender, and female empowerment in sub-Saharan Africa : studies with African youth.', Information technology for development., 26 (1). pp. 180-193.

Abstract

Data from qualitative and survey research with young people in 24 locations (urban and rural) across Ghana, Malawi, and South Africa expose the complex interplay between phone ownership and usage, female empowerment, and chronic poverty in Africa. We consider gendered patterns of phone ownership and use before examining practices of use in educational settings, in business and in romantic and sexual relationships. While some reshaping of everyday routines is evident, in the specific context of female empowerment we find little support within our sites for the concept of the mobile phone as an instrument of positive transformative change. The phone's application in romantic and sexual relationships demonstrates particularly strongly the way phones are complicit in constraining women's empowerment and points to potential wider repercussions, including for educational and entrepreneurship trajectories. Women's agency is still mired within wider structures of patriarchy and chronic poverty: existing inequalities are being re-inscribed and reinforced.

Item Type:Article
Full text:(VoR) Version of Record
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Full text:(VoR) Version of Record
Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution.
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Status:Peer-reviewed
Publisher Web site:https://doi.org/10.1080/02681102.2019.1622500
Publisher statement:© 2019 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Date accepted:No date available
Date deposited:07 June 2019
Date of first online publication:28 May 2019
Date first made open access:08 January 2020

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