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Gender and ageing: a development management perspective.
 
Lecture delivered at United Nations International Institute of Ageing, Malta and Centre for Social Policy Studies, University of Ghana training course on Gerontology, Ghana, July 1998.
 
Margaret Grieco, Professor of Organisation and Development Management, the Business School, University of North London.
 
1. Introduction
 
What do we mean by a development perspective on 'gender and ageing'? What is the relevance of a development management perspective to professional training in gerontology in Ghana? A development management perspective draws our attention to the difference in a) financial resources and differences in b) social organisation which make the situation of older women even more precarious in the developing world - and particularly in Africa - than in the high income countries of the world. In the high income areas of the world organisations such as the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) have drawn attention to the financial insecurities experienced by older women and indicated how this vulnerability is produced out of social structures which systematically preference males in earning and employment opportunities over the course of a lifetime. It has noted how women who frequently outlive their husbands experience a distinct drop in standard of living on the death of their spouse because much of their societal access to resources has been channelled through that spouse. This situation true of the world's wealthiest societies is exacerbated in African society where widowhood practices frequently absorb the bulk of a wife/ wives resources, property practices remove the roof over her head and entitlement to land on her husband's death and where life time earning and saving potentials have been weak in any case given the structure of society.
 
As the developing world ages, and according to the logic sketched here, gender and ageing will increasingly feature as a major social policy problem. It is a problem which is unlikely to be resolved by the policy thinking of the higher income economies, economies that have different social arrangements and greater financial resources to manage the problem (Grieco, 1996; Ping Kwong Kam, 1996; McCallum, 1989; World Bank, 1994). Indeed, the World Bank - perhaps the major actor in the development management field has no points person who deals with the topic of ageing, has no written policy materials on gender and ageing and is currently showing no indication that it has the intention of altering this organisational landscape despite the fact that next year will be the Year of the Older Person.
 
In this short presentation today we will look at two areas in which gender and ageing interacts with other key policy areas in the African continent and consider indigenous measures which can be taken to correct or improve the situation. Our first area for consideration will be the interaction between gender, ageing and infrastructural deficiencies in Africa; our second area of consideration will be the interaction between gender, ageing and education/socialisation in Africa. In both these areas, we will outline a set of problems which are readily visible from a development management perspective but concealed in the standard social policy approach to ageing, an approach which has largely neglected gender in any case. In both areas, we will suggest policy measures which can be taken to improve the current situation of older women in Africa, measures that require a change in the practices of the lead development agencies and African governments.
 
2. Gender, ageing and infrastructural deficiencies - women as a form of transport
 
There is a clear body of evidence coming out of agencies such as the World Bank and academic researchers that in Africa women make good major infrastructural deficiencies by being carriers of the transport burden (Grieco, Apt and Turner, 1996). They are the carriers of fuel, water, household goods into the household and for the removal of waste and excrement from the household. Over 80% of the transport burden in rural Africa is carried on the heads of women. The absence of solar energy technologies or electricity in rural Africa leaves women carrying the fuel burden on their heads; the absence of piped water or proximate wells places the load once again on women's heads; the poor penetration of rural areas by motorised traffic also places the loads on women's head; the absence of appropriately designed sewage systems in much of Africa adds to the transport burden of women in their contribution to household survival.
 
As women age, they are less able to make the same contribution to carrying the transport burden. The loss of the physical strength of a woman becomes the loss of a household resource; and the loss of that household resource places an additional strain on the existing household resources (the needs of the older woman now have to be met by the activities of another member of the household). The loss of physical strength can contribute to the marginalisation of the older woman - at its extreme, marginalisation can convert into elder abuse one marker on which is the stigmatisation of older women as 'witches'. The 'witch' definition reduces the responsibility of a community to care for its older women. It is an area of social policy and gerontology which requires a great deal more research but we can see that there is a clear potential for a strong link between infrastructural deficiencies and the marginalisation of older women given the critical role that women have played in the African transport structure.
 
Now let's play through the same scenario with solar energy, piped water, appropriately organised sewage systems and appropriately organised community transport provisions. If these conditions were brought into being then

Our argument is clear: the planning of infrastructure and policies on gender and on ageing must be considered as related in good development practice.
 
3. Gender, ageing, child socialisation and education: integrating women's wisdom into the formal education structure
 
Gender, child socialisation and ageing is another area in which care must be taken in applying Western models to low income countries. Let's first consider the relationship between gender, child socialisation and ageing in Africa, and most particularly in Ghana. The position of older women in the education and socialisation of children have been eroded as the education systems of Africa have largely been transposed from the West without reference to local constraints and local resources. The consequence of this transposition, which has ignored local constraints and local resources such as the part of older women in traditional socialisation practices, is that these systems do not function as they do in the West. In the absence of the availability of western levels of financial resources and despite the utilisation of a major proportion of their public sector resources in the field of education, African education systems: and
It marginalises the relevance of the experience of older persons and by breaking the link between young and old which existed historically it reduces the ability of the old to acquire 'modern knowledge'. Older women given their traditional role as child socialisers are the major losers in this arrangement.
 
Let's play this scenario out differently and in a way which recognises indigenous practices and institutions. The reduction of polarisation around age and around gender (and transforming older women into 'expert' educational resources will help greatly) will reduce the marginalisation of older women by the community with clear benefits to the well being of older women, the community, the economy and the education system.
 
4. Neglected by the development agencies: gender and ageing, an emerging African problem
 
So we have seen why and how development management can and should engage with the issue of gender and ageing but what is actually happening? What can be done? The next world gerontology meeting will be on gender. And Ghana could make a very real contribution. With Professor Apt and the Centre for Social Policy Studies there is a concrete step which can be taken - the Ghanaian perspective on gender and ageing can be collected, co-ordinated and presented at this meeting.
 
In the words of Nkrumah, forwards ever, backwards never.
 
5. Postscript
 
The trainees attending this course were professional and volunteer workers in a range of Ghanaian institutions which focus on ageing. They undertook to raise the gender and ageing issue within their various institutions.
 
References and background reading:
 
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Apt, N.A., 1995, Coping with old age in a changing Africa. Avebury: Aldershot.
 
Apt, N.A. and Grieco, M.S., 1994, 'Urbanisation, caring for elderly people and the changing African family: the challenges to social policy.' International Social Security Review, Vol 47 3 pp111-122,
 
Apt, N.A., Koomson, J., Williams, N. and Grieco, M., 1995, 'Family, finance and doorstep trading: the social and economic wellbeing of elderly Ghanaian female traders.' Southern African Journal of Gerontology, 4 (2) 17-24,
 
Adel Azer and Elham Afifi, 1992, Social support systems for the aged in Egypt. United Nations University Press.
 
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Grieco, M.S., 1992, Breaking the ice: the contribution of new transport information technologies to improving the quality of life of the elderly in a cold climate. Report commissioned by the Prefecture of Niigata, Japan .
 
Grieco, M.S.,1996, 'Older people's role in development' in In spite of poverty: The older population builds towards its future. AARP: Washington, D.C.
 
Grieco, M.S., Apt, N.A. and Turner, J., 1996, At Christmas and on rainy days: transport, travel and the female traders of Accra. Avebury: Aldershot.
 
Grieco, M.S and Apt, N.A. (1997) Development and the ageing of populations. United Nations: New York.
 
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Hong Kong Government, 1994, Report of the Working Group on Care for the Elderly. Hong Kong: Government Printer
 
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Thomas, D., 1983, The making of franchisal development. London: (Allen and Unwin)
 
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UN, 1991, Profiles of national coordinating mechanism on ageing. United Nations Office at Vienna Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs. United Nations, New York.
 
World Bank, 1994, Averting the old age crisis. World Bank: Washington D.C.
 

 

 
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