Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Nenadi Usman: The Importance of Education in the Women's Empowerment Movement


Education is the crux of the Nigerian women’s empowerment movement.

More girls are attending primary schools in the 21st century than ever before. By extension, more women are enrolling in universities and, upon graduation, capitalizing on their diplomas to land professional jobs and the sustainable incomes that come with careers.

Professors at Lagos State University studied decades of government data and found that Nigerian women accounted for a mere 7.7% of the country’s university-level students in 1960. Over the following 30 years, that figure rose to 27%. It surged further to about 45% by the start of the current decade.

Between 1960 and 2016, women in Nigeria’s professional workforce multiplied roughly seven times and the country’s gross domestic product climbed nearly 1,000%, according to a Trading Economics analysis.

That growth reflects multiple factors. But, key among them is Nigeria’s gradual but notable shift over generations from a male-dominated society to one that, today, is influenced by both men and women. A country that draws upon the ideas and talents of all its citizens stands a much stronger chance of innovating, of boosting productivity and growing its economy.

That philosophy is at the heart of the women’s empowerment movement in Nigeria, and at the core of that movement is a focus on continuous improvement in education infrastructure and resources and ongoing advances in learning opportunities for girls and women.

Nigerian Senator Nenadi Usman embodies and helps lead the movement. A former Minister of Finance and now a prominent member of the People’s Democratic Party in the National Assembly, she champions legislation and government action to bolster investments in education, advances for women in the workforce and overall economic prosperity.

A case in point: In 2017, the federal government set aside N1.6 billion for a women empowerment program called the National Women Empowerment Fund, NAWEF. The money is for low-cost loans, training and business support aimed at providing women boosts in the workplace or in operating their own businesses.

A particular aim is to inject funding into impoverished rural areas where women lack opportunities. The goal also is to build strong partnerships between the federal and state ministries of women affairs and various economic development partners.

Beyond the halls of the capital, Usman helped form a non-government organization called Education and Empowerment for Women and she chairs the Coalition of NGOs for Women Development in Kaduna.

Senator Nenadi built her own career on education.  She earned both a university degree and a post-graduate diploma. She began as a classroom teacher, went on to work for the governor of Kaduna and later became a minister in former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration. She has served in the Senate since winning election in 2011.

Her doctrine: Nigerian prosperity is dependent on the entirety of its population, and women must be enabled to realize their full collective potential.

Notably, while women have made big strides in recent decades, the long shadow of male chauvinism still lingers, still casts a pall over sizable swaths of the country.

Girls remain twice as likely as boys to live below the poverty line. Where school resources are limited, girls get squeezed out to make room for boys. Girls still have longer roads to traverse to get into universities. And women still trail men in the Nigerian workforce. In the National Assembly, for example, Nenadi and her women colleagues represent a small minority of senators.

But much progress has been made, and momentum can gather further with strong government support and robust advocacy from the likes of political leaders such as Nenadi Usman. Nigeria simply needs more such proponents in government. Women represent roughly have of the country’s population. When women account for half of the National Assembly’s members, full parity could follow. Genuine and equal prosperity for women could become a reality.

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