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Original Articles

The Contribution of African Women to Economic Growth and Development in the Pre-Colonial and Colonial Periods: Historical Perspectives and Policy Implications

Pages 42-73 | Published online: 11 Jun 2014
 

ABSTRACT

Bringing together history and economics, this paper presents a historical and processual understanding of women's economic marginalization in sub-Saharan Africa from the pre-colonial period to the end of colonial rule. It is not that women have not been economically active or productive; it is rather that they have often not been able to claim the proceeds of their labor or have it formally accounted for. The paper focuses on the pre-colonial and colonial periods and outlines three major arguments. First, it discusses the historical processes through which the labor of women was increasingly appropriated even in kinship structures in pre-colonial Africa, utilizing the concepts of “rights in persons” and “wealth in people”. Reviewing the processes of production and reproduction, it explains why most slaves in pre-colonial Africa were women and discusses how slavery and slave trade intensified the exploitation of women. Second, it analyzes how the cultivation of cash crops and European missionary constructions of the individual, marriage, and family from the early decades of the 19th century sequestered female labor and made it invisible in the realm of domestic production. Third, it discusses how colonial policies from the late 19th century reinforced the “capture” of female labor and the codification of patriarchy through the nature and operation of the colonial economy and the instrumentality of customary law.

JEL Classification:

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

An earlier version of this article appeared as a World Bank Policy Research Working Paper (WPS 6051) in April 2012. We are grateful to participants at the GAP Development Seminar Series, organized by the World Bank in the Spring of 2011, for their helpful comments. We would also like to thank Nihal Bayraktar, Shanta Devarajan, Meghan Healy, Renosi Mokate, Blanca Moreno-Dodson, Nathan Nunn, David Owusu-Ansah, Richard Roberts, James Robinson and Liang Xu for helpful comments and suggestions on an earlier version of this paper. The sequel to this article focuses on the post-colonial period and is available as World Bank Policy Research Working Paper WPS 6537 (July 2013).

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