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Policies of Gender Equality in Ethiopia: The Transformative Perspective

Dejene Mamo Bekana

International Journal of Public Administration, 2020, vol. 43, issue 4, 312-325

Abstract: This article addresses the question of why does an African country that had more women queens and empresses throughout its history practically than any other African country have the oldest known women queens in Africa, and purports to be committed to gender equality end up undermining its own objectives. The article shows that the focus on integrationist paradigm, an approach which focuses on the participation of women in the existing development paradigm, undermined the transformative nature of gender policy because it does not conceptualize gender parity as an end by itself, but as an instrument for economic progress. Consequently, progress towards gender parity remains to be little-by-little despite the strong political commitment to gender equality. The article concludes that the transformative nature of gender policy has been endangered by emphasis on macroeconomic outcomes, macro-level conceptualization of gender issues, and the limited role of civil society in influencing policy decisions.

Date: 2020
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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DOI: 10.1080/01900692.2019.1628060

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