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The
new political activism in Africa
Aili
Mari Tripp
Extracted from Journal of Democracy Volume 12, Number 3
July, 2001
http://www.polisci.wisc.edu/~tripp/jod.pdf
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Aili Mari Tripp is associate professor of political science
and women's studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and director of its Women's Studies Research Center. She is
the author of Women and Politics in Uganda (2000) and Changing the
Rules: The Politics of Liberalization and the Urban Informal Economy
in Tanzania (1997).
Introduction
Until
the 1990s, it was unheard of for an African woman to run for the
presidency of her country. To be sure, Africa had a few female rulers
earlier in the twentieth century, but none had been elected. Empress
Zauditu, for instance, ruled Ethiopia from 1917 to 1930; Queen-regents
Dzeliwe Shongwe (1982-83) and Ntombi Thwala (1983-86)
reigned over Swaziland; and Elizabeth Domitien of the Central African
Republic was appointed as Africa's first female prime minister,
serving in 1975-76. It was only in the 1990s, however, that
significant numbers of African women began aspiring to positions
of national leadership.
In the 1990s,
women ran for president in Kenya and Liberia, while others sought
party nominations for the presidency in Angola, Burkina Faso, the
Central African Republic, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Nigeria, Sa‹o
Tomé and Príncipe, and Tanzania. Although all were
unsuccessful in their bids for power, these women set important
precedents in their respective countries.
The first woman
to become an African head of state in a nonmonarchical regime was
Liberia's Ruth Perry, who chaired her country's six-member
collective presidency, the Council of State, in the mid-1990s. In
1994, Uganda's Wandera Specioza Kazibwe became Africa's
first female vice-president. Rwanda and Burundi elected female prime
ministers in the mid-1990s, and Senegal chose a woman prime minister
in 2001. By the end of the 1990s, legislative bodies in Ethiopia,
Lesotho, and South Africa had all appointed female house speakers,
while those in Uganda, Zimbabwe, and South Africa had female deputy
speakers.
The number of
African women in parliament also increased markedly during the 1990s.
Africa in 1960 had the lowest rate of female legislative participation
in the world. Since then, however, African women have made striking
gains. By 2001, women on average held 12 percent of parliamentary
seats throughout Africa, compared with half this number a decade
earlier. Female representation was as high as 31 percent in Mozambique
(up from 16 percent in 1991); 30 percent in South Africa (up from
3 percent in 1991); and 25 percent in Namibia (up from 7 percent
in 1994). Even these countries, however, did not come close to proportionately
representing women, who make up over half the population in most
countries. In April 2001, African women lagged behind their counterparts
in the Nordic countries, where female legislative representation
was 39 percent; in the rest of Europe (excluding the Nordic countries),
where women held 14 percent of legislative seats; and in Asia and
in the Americas, where women held roughly 15 percent of legislative
seats (see the Table on the facing page). Only the Arab world fared
worse than Africa, with a 4 percent showing for women legislators.1
Yet, while Africa trailed most other regions of the world in its
share of women legislators in 2000, over the past four decades it
has exhibited the world's fastest rate of growth in female
representation.
What accounts
for African women's increased visibility as independent political
actors? No single factor explains these new trends; rather, one
must consider a combination of factors. In general, the shift from
one-party to multiparty politics, and in some cases from military
to civilian rule, created favorable conditions for greater participation
by sectors of society long marginalized under authoritarianism.
In semiauthoritarian states as well, women began finding greater
room to maneuver and were able to capitalize on an improved political
climate, even though serious constraints remained and progress remained
precarious.
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1.
Inter-Parliamentary Union, www.ipu.org/wmn-e/world.htm,
2001; United Nations, World's Women: Trends and Statistics,
1970-1990 (New York: United Nations, 1991).
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