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Sex versus SES: A declining significance of gender for schooling in sub-Saharan Africa?

Gender, Equality and Education from International and Comparative Perspectives

ISBN: 978-1-84855-094-0, eISBN: 978-1-84855-095-7

Publication date: 19 May 2009

Abstract

Recent worldwide gains in girls’ schooling are raising new questions about the continued relevance of gender for educational inequality. At issue is whether the time has come to shift the policy focus away from gender to socioeconomic status. Answers to this question, we suggest, depend on how gender gaps close, i.e., do they close irreversibly, evenly, and faster than socio-economic (SES)-related inequality?

Against this background and building on contrasted sociological perspectives on inequality, our chapter examines the recent convergence trajectories of several sub-Saharan countries, asking if these trajectories warrant a policy shift away from gender.

Our findings are mixed. Although, the magnitude of sex-related inequality in schooling is consistently smaller than SES-related inequality, the process of gender convergence remains reversible and it unfolds in top-down fashion. Such findings warrant continued attention to gender in sub-Saharan Africa, but with particular focus on poor girls and on synergies that address both female and poor children. This conclusion supports theoretical advances that transcend the Manichean divide between focus on cultural recognition and socioeconomic redistribution.

Citation

Eloundou-Enyegue, P.M., Makki, F. and Giroux, S.C. (2009), "Sex versus SES: A declining significance of gender for schooling in sub-Saharan Africa?", Baker, D.P. and Wiseman, A.W. (Ed.) Gender, Equality and Education from International and Comparative Perspectives (International Perspectives on Education and Society, Vol. 10), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 1-37. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3679(2009)0000010004

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited