TY - JOUR
T1 - Gender-biased Street Naming in Urban Sub-Saharan Africa
T2 - Influential Factors, Features and Future Recommendations
AU - Zuvalinyenga, Dorcas
AU - Bigon, Liora
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2020.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - This article explores the present-day problematic of gender-biased street names as prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa’s cityscapes. That is, the abundance of masculine street names as opposed to feminine ones in the urban environments of this region. The article first provides a comparative view on the scope of this toponymic phenomenon in other geographic regions with relation to sub-Saharan Africa. It also identifies few decisive factors in the creation of the gender-biased urban landscapes in sub-Saharan Africa. These factors consist of: recent tendencies in critical toponymy studies; colonial and post-colonial cultures of governmentality; and inadequate urban planning legislation and vision as pertained by post-colonial states. This toponymic problematic is then exemplified in a site-specific analysis of the city of Bindura in north-eastern Zimbabwe. The article concludes with recommendations for designing a more socially inclusive urban management policy in the region, pointing to future research directions of this under-studied phenomenon in critical place-name studies.
AB - This article explores the present-day problematic of gender-biased street names as prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa’s cityscapes. That is, the abundance of masculine street names as opposed to feminine ones in the urban environments of this region. The article first provides a comparative view on the scope of this toponymic phenomenon in other geographic regions with relation to sub-Saharan Africa. It also identifies few decisive factors in the creation of the gender-biased urban landscapes in sub-Saharan Africa. These factors consist of: recent tendencies in critical toponymy studies; colonial and post-colonial cultures of governmentality; and inadequate urban planning legislation and vision as pertained by post-colonial states. This toponymic problematic is then exemplified in a site-specific analysis of the city of Bindura in north-eastern Zimbabwe. The article concludes with recommendations for designing a more socially inclusive urban management policy in the region, pointing to future research directions of this under-studied phenomenon in critical place-name studies.
KW - Bindura/Zimbabwe
KW - Critical toponymy studies
KW - gender-biased street names
KW - sub-Saharan Africa
KW - urban management
KW - urban planning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086730434&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0021909620934825
DO - 10.1177/0021909620934825
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AN - SCOPUS:85086730434
SN - 0021-9096
VL - 56
SP - 589
EP - 609
JO - Journal of Asian and African Studies
JF - Journal of Asian and African Studies
IS - 3
ER -