The complexities of female-headed households in Botswana
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Date
2000Author
Mookodi, G.B.
Publisher
Pula: Botswana Journal of African StudiesType
Published ArticleMetadata
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The concept of female-headed household has emerged as an important analytical
category in the examination of poverty in life chances both within the context of policy research and social science scholarship. This paper presents the complexities that arise in the use of the concept of female-headed household within the context of Botswana. The
paper presents some of the criticisms that the concept of headship in itself presents a
monolithic and often limited notion of social organisation that fails to take into account complex gendered social interactions that occur within and outside the confines of
domestic units. The results of a study conducted in 1996 reveal the complex interplay of
cultural-structure and individual agency that are obscured by discrete notions of
'headship'.