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Oil and women's political participation: a sub-national assessment of the role of protests and NGOs in Nigeria

机译:石油和妇女的政治参与:对尼日利亚抗议和非政府组织的作用的次国家评估

摘要

The resource curse literature, which links natural resource abundance with negative political and economic outcomes, is largely based on large-N cross-national studies. This thesis examines the effects of oil production on women’s political participation at the sub-national level, comparing the 36 states in the Nigerian federation, of which some are oil-producing. Shedding new light on the negative effects of oil production at the local and community level, and exploring the gender-related dimensions of the resource curse, I argue that the effect of oil varies across different forms of political activity: while oil production may have a negative impact on women’s legislative participation, it can also have a positive impact on non-formal types of political participation, specifically protest and NGO activity. I further suggest that the underlying trigger for both of these effects is oil’s impact on women’s work, which is manifested differently at national and local levels. The analysis is based on a mixed-methods approach that combines quantitative and qualitative tools, including original datasets on oil production and legislative participation, women’s protests, and women-led NGOs across Nigeria’s states.ududThe combination of evidence offers a wide-ranging repertoire of the impact of oil on women. Drawing on historical evidence and women’s testimonies, this thesis suggests that oil production has negatively affected women’s labour force participation in Nigeria, while women’s work in oil-producing states has been further diminished due to environmental degradation and regional militarisation. The extremely low levels of female legislative participation in Nigeria at both the national and state levels are linked with the negative impact of oil on women’s work. Analysing a dataset of press reports and a directory of Nigerian NGOs to compare oil and non-oil producing states in the Nigerian federation, this thesis finds strong evidence for the impact of oil on women’s non-formal political participation at the local level, in oil-producing states. Thus, evidence from Nigeria suggests that oil production may have a dual effect on women’s political participation – undermining formal participation while increasing non-formal participation,a finding that adds to our understanding of the resource curse, women’s political participation, and the link between the two.
机译:资源诅咒文献将自然资源的丰富性与负面的政治和经济结果联系起来,主要是基于大型的跨国研究。本文比较了尼日利亚联邦的36个州,其中一些州在生产石油,从而研究了石油生产在国家以下各级对女性政治参与的影响。我新近揭示了石油生产在地方和社区层面的负面影响,并探讨了资源诅咒中与性别有关的方面,我认为,石油的影响因政治活动的不同形式而异:对妇女立法参与的负面影响,也可能对非正式形式的政治参与,特别是抗议和非政府组织活动,产生积极影响。我进一步建议,这两种影响的潜在诱因是石油对女性工作的影响,这在国家和地方层面上表现得不同。分析是基于混合方法的方法,结合了定量和定性工具,包括有关尼日利亚各州的石油生产和立法参与,妇女抗议以及妇女领导的非政府组织的原始数据集。 ud ud各种油品对妇女的影响。根据历史证据和妇女的证词,本论文表明,石油生产对尼日利亚的妇女劳动力参与产生了负面影响,而产油国的妇女工作由于环境恶化和区域军事化而进一步减少。尼日利亚在国家和州两级的女性立法参与率极低,这与石油对妇女工作的负面影响有关。通过分析新闻报道的数据集和尼日利亚非政府组织的目录以比较尼日利亚联邦的石油生产国和非石油生产国,本论文找到了强有力的证据,证明了石油对妇女在地方一级的非正规政治参与产生的影响生产国。因此,尼日利亚的证据表明,石油生产可能对妇女的政治参与产生双重影响-破坏正式的参与,同时增加非正规的参与,这一发现使我们对资源诅咒,妇女的政治参与以及两者之间的联系有了更深入的了解。二。

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