Threatening and Appropriate Bodies in Nation Building: Paths to the World’s 1st Female Parliamentary Majority in Post-Genocide Rwanda
Abstract
While Rwanda first attracted the world’s attention for the genocide that took place in
1994, 16 years later the country is capturing interest because it now has the highest
number of women in its parliament than in any other country in the world. After the first
post-genocide legislative elections, in 2003, about 49% of elected legislators in the lower
house of Parliament were women. Five years later, women constitute over 56% of elected
legislators following the subsequent elections in September 2008. This success of women
at the ballot box is unprecedented in the history of representative and electoral politics
anywhere.
Women politicians’ success in elections is so far attributed to the 30% reserved
seats for women. However, the electoral outcome for women far exceeds this
constitutional quota. This thesis, through methodological triangulation explores the
factors and conditions that can help us develop a better contextual understanding of how
and why women managed to perform relatively better at elections. Following an
explorative and descriptive approach, I seek to understand and explain electoral outcome
for women through the subjective understandings and interpretations of women
politicians who experience, affect and are affected by the electoral process. I also learn
from political party leaders as gatekeepers of who gets to represent parties in elections
and why they select the candidates that they do. This approach is supplemented by
reading documentary evidence such as electoral laws, published works and dominant elite
discourse as they are discerned from political speeches addressing how presence in sites
of power is constructed and justified.
Overall, findings show that women’s success at the ballot box is neither
accidental nor a consequence of one single factor such as quotas. Instead, the high
numbers of women in Rwanda’s Parliament can be understood to be a consequence of
varied factors and conditions embedded in the country’s violent political past and the
recent socio-political changes driven by the elite. In this thesis, I suggest that this change,
where the dominant political elite are trying to shape the political environment away from
the Tutsi-Hutu politicised and dichotomised differences towards commonness under the
politics of gender equality and homogenising political categories through the rubric of
Rwandan-ness can also be better understood when one comprehends the effects of the
war and genocide. This also calls for comprehending the historical, political and
institutional contexts within which electoral politics takes place as well as how political
power is organized and legitimised rather than focusing on one single element such as
reserved seats. In this regard, the role of dominant elite discourse in constructing and
justifying presence in sites of power is highlighted
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Peace and Development Research ; Institutionen för globala studier, freds- och utvecklingsforskning
Disputation
18 May 2010, 14:00, Seminariegatan 1
Date of defence
2010-05-18
ckayumba@yahoo.com
View/ Open
Date
2010-04-27Author
Kayumba, Christopher
Keywords
women
opportunity structures
representation
presence
war
genocide
political systems
electoral systems
gender
nationalism
ethnicity
ideology
missing men
reserved seats
quotas
parliament
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8117-7
Language
eng