Women in Mozambique

Liazzat J. K. Bonate, Jonna Katto
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Abstract

Mozambique is divided into matrilineal north and patrilineal south, while the central part of the country has a mixture of the two. Both types of kinship organization have important implications for the situation of women. Women in matrilineal societies could access land and political and decision-making power. They had their own property and their children belonged to their matrikin. In patrilineal societies, women depended on their husbands and their kin groups in order to access farmland. Children and property belonged to the husband’s clan. During the colonial period (c. 1890–1975), women’s position in Mozambique was affected by the Indigenato regime (1917–1961). The native African population (classified as indígenas) were denied the rights of Portuguese citizenship and placed under the jurisdiction of local “traditional habits and customs” administered by the appointed chiefs. Despite the fact that Portuguese citizenship was extended to all independent of creed and race by the 1961 Overseas Administrative Reform, most rural African areas remained within the Indigenato regime until the end of colonialism in 1974. Portuguese colonialism adopted an assimilationist and “civilizing” stance and tried to domesticate African women and impose a patriarchal Christian model of family and gender relations. Women were active in the independence struggle and liberation war (1964–1974), contributing greatly to ending colonialism in Mozambique. In 1973, Frelimo launched a nationwide women’s organization, Organização da Mulher Moçambicana (Organization of Mozambican Women, OMM). Although women were encouraged to work for wages in the first decade after independence, they remained largely limited to the subsistence economy, especially in rural areas. The OMM upheld the party line describing women as “natural” caregivers. Only with the political and economic liberalizations of the 1990s were many women able to access new opportunities. The merging of various women’s organizations working in the country during this period helped to consolidate decades-long efforts to expand women’s political and legal rights in independent Mozambique. In the early 2000s, these efforts led to the reform of the family law, which was crucial for the improvement of women’s rights and conditions in Mozambique.
莫桑比克的妇女
莫桑比克分为母系北部和父系南部,而该国中部地区是两种血统的混合。这两种类型的亲属组织对妇女的处境都有重要的影响。母系社会的妇女可以获得土地、政治和决策权。他们有自己的财产,他们的孩子属于他们的母亲。在父系社会中,妇女依靠她们的丈夫和她们的亲属团体来获得农田。孩子和财产属于丈夫的家族。在殖民时期(约1890-1975年),莫桑比克妇女的地位受到土著政权(1917-1961年)的影响。非洲土著居民(归类为indígenas)被剥夺了葡萄牙公民的权利,并被置于由任命的酋长管理的当地“传统习惯和习俗”的管辖之下。尽管1961年的海外行政改革将葡萄牙公民身份扩大到所有独立于信仰和种族的人,但大多数非洲农村地区在1974年殖民主义结束之前仍然处于土著政权之下。葡萄牙殖民主义采取了同化主义和“教化”立场,试图驯化非洲妇女,并将父权制的基督教家庭和两性关系模式强加于人。妇女积极参加独立斗争和解放战争(1964-1974年),为结束莫桑比克的殖民主义作出了巨大贡献。1973年,莫桑比克解放阵线发起了一个全国性的妇女组织,莫桑比克妇女组织。虽然在独立后的第一个十年鼓励妇女为工资而工作,但她们仍然主要限于维持生计的经济,特别是在农村地区。OMM支持该党的路线,称女性是“天生的”照顾者。只有在1990年代的政治和经济自由化之后,许多妇女才能够获得新的机会。在此期间在该国工作的各种妇女组织的合并有助于巩固数十年来在独立的莫桑比克扩大妇女政治和法律权利的努力。21世纪初,这些努力促成了家庭法的改革,这对改善莫桑比克妇女的权利和条件至关重要。
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