4.1 Article

'Bicycles are really important for women!' Exploring bicycles, gender and development in Nicaragua and Uganda

期刊

THIRD WORLD QUARTERLY
卷 43, 期 2, 页码 452-474

出版社

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2021.2020634

关键词

Human and nonhuman; sport; gender and development; bicycles for development; technology; postcolonial feminism; gender relations

资金

  1. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant [435-2016-0090]
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation John R. Evans Leaders Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study explores the impact of bicycles on women and girls in both structured BFD programs and recreational cycling environments, highlighting how women challenge gender norms and resist traditional stereotypes related to cycling. The research also observes that access to bicycles can reinforce the burden on women as primary caregivers.
This article explores 'bicycles for development' (BFD) - a 'movement' that positions the bicycle as a tool to promote key development goals, especially those related to the achievement of gender equality. Despite the increasing growth and prominence of BFD, there remains limited empirical research that investigates the intersections among gender, development, mobility and technologies such as the bicycle. Using visual participatory action research - informed by postcolonial feminist theory and new materialisms - this study explored how bicycles shaped the lives of women and girls in both structured BFD programmes (Uganda) and recreational cycling environments (Nicaragua). Three interrelated themes are discussed: (1) within communities there are conflicting views of the women and girls who participate in BFD and broader cycling related activities; (2) women in this study, through their involvement in BFD programmes or their engagement in cycling, challenge gender norms and resist traditional gender stereotypes related to cycling; and (3) access to a bicycle is associated with a focus on domestic and income-generating work - (re-)producing the burden on women to be primary caregivers. We conclude by reflecting on the duality of the bicycle as a promising and intricate technology used to contribute to gender and development objectives.

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