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<title>WOMEN’S POLITICAL REPRESENTATION IN HOUSES OF ASSEMBLY OF SELECTED STATES IN SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA, 1999-2019</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2106</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-08T02:42:53Z</dc:date>
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<title>WOMEN’S POLITICAL REPRESENTATION IN HOUSES OF ASSEMBLY OF SELECTED STATES IN SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA, 1999-2019</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2107</link>
<description>WOMEN’S POLITICAL REPRESENTATION IN HOUSES OF ASSEMBLY OF SELECTED STATES IN SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA, 1999-2019
ADEBAYO, Adedeji Victor
Democracy drives social development and enhances political participation. Women in&#13;
Nigeria remain underrepresented in all levels of politics, especially the legislature.&#13;
Existing studies have focused largely on Women’s Political Representation (WPR) at the&#13;
national level, with little consideration given to state’s legislature and its contributions to&#13;
women’s issues. This study was, therefore, designed to assess WPR in southwestern&#13;
Nigeria from 1999 to 2019, a period that falls after the Beijing Platform for Action in 1995&#13;
and the beginning of Nigeria nascent democracy. Factors that influence the selection of&#13;
women into legislative Committees, women’s contributions to lawmaking with reference&#13;
to women’s issues and constituency services were also examined.&#13;
Anne Phillips’ Politics of Presence Theory was adopted as the framework, while&#13;
exploratory and case study designs were used. Houses of Assembly (HoAs) in Ekiti&#13;
(EKSHA), Lagos (LSHA) and Ogun (OGSHA) states were purposively selected based on&#13;
more representation of female lawmakers than others. Purposive sampling technique was&#13;
used to select 63 respondents. Key Informant Interviews were conducted with 18&#13;
lawmakers (15 females and three males), 21 party leaders and nine gender activists, based&#13;
on their positions as constitutional representatives of the people, importance to political&#13;
recruitment, and knowledge of women issues, respectively. In-depth Interviews were&#13;
conducted with nine legislative support staff and six members of the Executive arm of&#13;
government. Legislative and constituency records, as well as newspaper reports and&#13;
journal articles, provided the secondary data. Data were thematically analysed.&#13;
Only the LSHA had female representatives among the three HoAs as of 1999. The&#13;
situation however improved when a female became the Speaker in OGSHA in 2003. The&#13;
level of WPR in EKSHA rose from one in 2003 to four in 2011 and 2019. In LSHA, WPR&#13;
witnessed a decline from seven in 2011 to three in 2019. In OGSHA, WPR maintained a&#13;
steady increase from one in 2003 to four in 2019. However, these numerical increases fell&#13;
below the number required as tipping point for women’s effective representation. Female&#13;
representatives in the HoAs featured prominently in Committees normatively associated&#13;
with women, such as women affairs, poverty alleviation, health, information, education&#13;
and finance. Lawmakers’ policy preferences, academic backgrounds, as well as&#13;
professional and legislative experience, were identified as factors that influenced selection&#13;
of women into the Committees. Out of the 34 female representatives who served in the&#13;
HoAs, only four (two in OGSHA, and one each in EKSHA and LSHA) sponsored bills,&#13;
though none addressed women-specific issues. Constituency services carried out by&#13;
female representatives revealed their policy preferences for health, education, women&#13;
empowerment and financial support for widows and the elderly.&#13;
Women’s political representation in Houses of Assembly in southwestern Nigeria from&#13;
1999 to 2019 was low with minimal impact on women’s issues. Hence, there is the need&#13;
for women to contribute more to legislative policymaking.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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