Women’s Political Participation and its Predictors in Northern and Southern Nigeria

This paper explores variations of women’s political participation across Southern and Northern Nigeria

Abstract

The United Nations Development Programme states that women’s political participation is a necessary ingredient for a peaceful and resilient society, yet large gender gaps obstinately persist in many countries around the globe. With a focus on Nigeria and using an analysis of data from Nigeria’s 2015 and 2019 General Elections and Afrobarometer’s 2018 Nigeria Round 7 survey, this paper explores variations of women’s political participation across Southern and Northern Nigeria. In recent times, Northern Nigeria has experienced extensive conflict, and Southern Nigeria outperforms the north in terms of women’s education, participation in paid employment and control of earnings. Given these factors, conventional wisdom among policy actors and researchers would predict that women in Southern Nigeria should have considerably higher rates of political participation than those in Northern Nigeria. However, digging deeper into the available data on political participation, the paper suggests that factors such as education and employment do not predict the dimensions of women’s political participation or can predict the unexpected. The paper concludes that policymakers may need to look beyond these conventional factors when supporting programmes on women’s political participation in Nigeria. More research is needed into contextual factors to better understand what lies behind the varying levels of women’s political participation in Northern and Southern Nigeria.

This work is part of the Action for Empowerment and Accountability (A4EA) Research programme

Citation

Oladapo, O.A.; Atela, M. and Agbalajobi, D.T. (2021) Women’s Political Participation and its Predictors in Northern and Southern Nigeria, IDS Working Paper 548, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/IDS.2021.023

Women’s Political Participation and its Predictors in Northern and Southern Nigeria

Published 15 February 2021