Type | Journal Article - Culture, Health & Sexuality |
Title | Global rights, local realities: negotiating gender equality and sexual rights in the Caprivi Region, Namibia |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 9 |
Issue | 6 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2007 |
Page numbers | 599-614 |
URL | http://eprints.ioe.ac.uk/3997/1/Thomas2007Global599.pdf |
Abstract | Ongoing gender inequalities are frequently cited as a major reason for high HIV prevalence rates in southern Africa. While steps have been made to promote and pass legislation that upholds equal rights for women, this paper examines the ways in which discourses of gender equality and ensuing sexual rights can have complex, contradictory and even adverse implications for individuals when they are mobilised, resisted and reinterpreted at local level. Drawing upon research undertaken in the Caprivi Region of Namibia, this paper examines the ways in which men and women respond to ideas about gender equality and seeks to place these responses within the wider context of socio-economic change and understandings of morality prevalent within the region. The tendency of many young women to seek out relationships with older men and the increasing costs of bride-wealth payments play a key role in reinforcing patriarchal attitudes and fuelling disrespect for women’s rights both before and within marriage. In addition, a failure to adhere to customary norms which uphold men’s dominant role 1 continues to threaten the support networks and assets available to women. The consequences of this situation are examined with particular focus on implications for the future transmission of HIV. |
» | Namibia - Population and Housing Census 2001 |