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Gender
and Politics in Liberia: A Not-So-Simple Correlation
by Cyeronke Oyewumi
December 5, 2005 (Amsterdam News) – The recent
election in Liberia is momentous in more ways than one. Most remarkable
is the fact that the election itself took place at all in the wake
of a long and bloody civil war.Equally significant is the emergence
of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as the victorious candidate and thus, the
first elected African female president.
We must congratulate Mama Ellen on her victory and learn from her
perseverance given the fact that this was not the first time she
contested elections. For me, the salience of this historic event
is the fact that Liberian presidency is no longer out of bounds
for women, or to use the language of Nigerian political discourse,
the Liberian presidency is no longer a no-go area for women.
Perhaps, the surprise is that Liberia beat even Germany, which had
its elections more than eight weeks ago, in this great achievement
of electing a female leader. And Americans? In the United States,
the so-called mother nation of Liberia, female presidency remains
a possibility only on a TV Drama, not even a TV Reality Show!!!
Against this background, the significance of Mama Ellen's political
success in Monrovia, then like Mama Wangari's Nobel Peace Prize
cannot be over-celebrated. Please, pass the palm wine.
Nevertheless, the relationship between gender and politics is more
complicated than it would seem. The worldwide modern male dominance
in all spheres of human endeavor is normally negatively correlated
with women's participation in politics. The higher the level of
male dominance in society, the lower women's participation in politics.
Put another way, it is assumed that in any given society, the more
equal (forgive my Orwellian language) women are to men, the greater
their political participation, and the greater their political participation
the more equal they are.
Articulating the issue in these terms, necessarily raise a chicken/egg
question of which comes first, female equality or political participation,
a matter which will not detain us here.Even so, the election of
a woman to the commanding heights of national office and certainly,
the presence of women in the upper echelons of government are often
seen as sure sign that women are less subordinated in that particular
society.
In turn, such a development is also believed to herald a period
of governmental responsiveness to women's interests and concerns.But
the evidence around the globe in regard to the relationship between
the visible numbers of women in political office and the general
well being of the female populace remains inconclusive; at best
it is a
mixed bag. Many commentators have pointed out that the reign of
T, a.k.a Margaret Thatcher in Britain was not particularly good
for women.
Similarly, few gender benefits have occurred for women under the
administrations of Indira Gandhi in India, Bandaranaike in Sri Lanka,
and Corazon Aquino and Gloria Arroyo in the Philippines.In Africa,
the most interesting question to pose at this moment in history
is the following: What has given rise to this spate of women in
political office in a noticeable number of African states? The female
composition of Rwanda's legislature stands at 48 percent –
the highest of any country in the world. Both South Africa and Zimbabwe
have female deputy presidents, and Namibia has a female speaker
of parliament. Affirmative action policies in South Africa and Uganda
have helped in focusing women's political participation and have
ensured the increase in the numbers of females in public life.
Such positively discriminatory policies on behalf of women are necessary
to open up the political process, which is dominated by old boys
networks that perpetuate particular political parties, and same
old entrenched political elite, which are totally closed to ''outsiders,''
including women. Arguments in favor of quotas targeted at traditionally
marginalized groups such as women rest on the premise that democracies
for the sake of legitimacy must reflect the social diversity of
the citizenry.
Until the election of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf in Liberia, the strong
presence of women in elective offices in Africa appeared to be more
an East and Southern Africa phenomenon than continent-wide. What
is disturbing though, is that all the trail-blazing countries have
been through catastrophic conflicts that almost totally destroyed
their societies.Apparently, post-conflict states in Africa are better
positioned to elect women into political office because they had
to more or less rebuild from scratch. It is in the post-conflict
period of reconstruction that women are increasingly visible as
leaders in all sectors of the society.
Perhaps, this should come as no surprise given the fact that women
were not only victims of civil wars; they were also combatants,
fully participating at all levels. Many women also played significant
leadership roles in the resolution of the conflicts and such leadership
must be rewarded in peacetime. Rwanda may represent a unique case
in which women are called upon to take up leadership in the wake
of war and genocide that have taken a disproportionately high toll
on men.
Undoubtedly, enlarging female representation and leadership in elected
offices, and public life in general is surely a welcome and overdue
trend. But one cannot help but ask the following question: In other
African countries, do we have to go through such devastation before
government becomes more gender-inclusive? Is tragedy a prerequisite
for remaking democracy in our own image? Can positive trends spread
as a natural evolution rather than as a consequence of makeover
after extreme devastation?
Whatever the case may be, regardless of the gender, age or ethnicity
of the leadership, the challenges are daunting.
To return to the question of whether gender is a good barometer
of responsive and responsible leadership, I offer the following
observation: In many parts of Africa, the few women who have been
in positions of authority and are visible in public life have not
given us any reason to believe that female leadership will be radically
different from the rampant oppressive, and irresponsible male rulership
that the citizenry has unfortunately become accustomed.
Most remarkable are experiences in Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya of
that nightmare spectacle called ''First Lady-ism'' in which the
wives of the Heads of State arrogate to themselves powers that the
constitution does not grant them, and then proceed to loot the treasury,
abuse journalists and citizens alike, or peddle their influence
in awarding no-bid contracts, and generally behave badly.
These women have been blessings neither to women, nor the nations
as a whole. I do recognize that we must make a distinction between
women in elected offices and those whose claim to fame is that they
sleep in the corridors of power. This is surely the dilemma in understanding
the bifurcated nature of female identity.
If anything, the emergence of autonomous women, elected on their
own merit and in their own right, challenge the female-subordinating,
postcolonial process of what I call the ''wife-ization of citizenship'':
the idea that the only route to power for women is through association
with a man.
There is no question that the presence of women in elected offices
and indeed in leadership positions in all spheres of life is a thing
of value in and of itself. But we cannot assume that being women
makes them innately attuned to gender discrimination and more favorably
disposed to promoting women's interests and concerns.
Consequently, we must not get bogged down by facile gender debates
that do not address the most fundamental questions and pressing
issues facing African societies.
For a start, leaders and followers alike should work to put the
structures of inclusive and responsive governments in place. We
must build, strengthen, and democratizepolitical as well as social
institutions.Ideally, this will shift the focus away from individual
leaders and their personal identities to the more important matter
of what a particular leader wants to accomplish and how s/he goes
about meeting those goals.Ultimately, given our history, the search
is necessarily for social transformation and social justice. The
first line of action has to be for an inclusive political process
incorporating not only women and ethnic minority groups, but also
the majority of Africans who remain disenfranchised and outside
the political process.
From:
http://www.amsterdamnews.com/News/article/article.asp?NewsID=5617&sID=12
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