Family Solutions to African Traditional/Cultural Practices Harmful to Women: Exploring Men s Role in The Eradication Process

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Family Solutions to African Traditional/Cultural Practices Harmful to Women: Exploring Men s Role in The Eradication Process Mame Kani Diop, Ph.D. Fellow (Montclair State University) Doctoral Research Assistant Department of Family and Child Studies January 28 th 2016 UN NGO Committee on the Family

What is Female Genital Mutilation? According to the World Health Organization: FGM comprises all procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the genital organs whether for cultural, religious or other nontherapeutic reasons (WHO, 2008)

Fact Sheet 140 million females have undergone the procedure About 3 million girls are at risk every year. 30 girls will be cut by the end of this presentation FGM is mostly carried out on young girls sometimes between infancy and age 15. The procedure has no health benefits for girls and women FGM is deeply embedded in cultural practices FGM is a violation of the human rights of girls and women FGM has no religious endorsement

Where is FGM practiced? Africa Asia Australia Europe United States Middle East Image source: http://www.who.int/reproductive-health/fgm/fig1.htm

A Harmful Practice Fear of infertility Anxiety Posttraumatic stress disorder Psycho-sexual harm Fear of sexual intercourse Depression

Obstructed labour in a woman with infibulation (Courtesy: Assoc Prof Moustapha Toure, Mali Hospital, Bamako, Mali).

Consequences and Perceived Benefits Enhances male sexual pleasure Low life chances Pre-requisite Not marriageable for Labeled Ensures as promiscuous paternity confidence Consequences FGM assurances No economic security Assurance for Enhances female marriageability Low social status Exclusion Decreases from women high circles female sexual desires = fidelity Peer & Virginity social pressure assurance

Linking The Family Man to a Harmful Practice Marriageability Virginity Loyalty Fidelity Paternal assurance Control of female desires

Quest for female purity / virginity Virginity = a pre-requisite for marriage Men s role in the maintenance of FGM Associated with female and family honor and decency FGM reduces or eliminate women s/girls sexual desires Lessen temptations for potential extra marital affairs 61.8% of men embrace its continuation 60.7% intend to have it performed on there daughters (GDHS, 1999) (Kaplan et al, 2013)

FGM Increases marriage prospects

Men demand assurance for paternity confidence

Social Convention Theory 1 Follow the Social Convention Eligibility (For marriage) Fidelity (In marriage) Paternity (From marriage) Men s Roles Men as gatekeepers Men as participants 2 Break the Social Convention Ostracization Isolation Exclusion

Men s Role in the Eradication Process Laws Policies Work with /create NGO s Involvement with community / Religious leaders Schools Dialogue with wives/mothers Education Awareness to Action Agent of change Advocate Reject FGM Peers Public announcement Agent of behavior change

Conclusion Most women believe that FGM is totally preserved by men as they have the irrefutable power to refuse to marry non-fgm women. Men who possess greater social power are the gatekeepers of FGM and protectors of the current social order. Regulating female sexuality & reproductive function, family honor, fidelity, & loyalty, female virginity, male sexual pleasure, and paternity confidence seem to revolve around male preoccupation Need for men s collaboration, involvement, and contribution in the anti-fgm campaign. Need for men s advocacy at all social level Need for men as agents of change / Advocates

Selected References Dorkenoo, E. (1994). Cutting the rose: Female genital mutilation: The practice and its prevention. London: Minority Rights Publications. Gage, A., & Van Rossem, R. (2006). Attitudes toward the discontinuation of female genital cutting among men and women in Guinea. International Journal Of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 92(1), 92-96. Gele, A. A., Johansen, E. B., & Sundby, J. (2012). When female circumcision comes to the West: Attitudes toward the practice among Somali immigrants in Oslo. BMC Public Health, 12(1), 697. Gruenbaum, E. (2001). The female circumcision controversy: An anthropological perspective. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. Halim, A. (2006). Sudanese women in the United States: The double problem of gender and culture. New York: The Edwin Mellen Press Ltd. Kaplan, A., Cham, B., Njie, L., Seixas, A., Blanco, S., & Utzet, M. (2013). Female genital mutilation/cutting: the secret world of women as seen by men. Obstetrics And Gynecology International Klein-Lightfoot. H. (1989). Prisoners of Ritual: An odyssey into female genital mutilation in Africa. New York: The Haworth Press; London: The Haworth Press. Skaine, R. (2005). Female Genital Mutilation: Legal, cultural, and medical issues. London: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Terry, L., & Harris, K. (2013). Female genital mutilation: a literature review. Nursing Standard, 28(1), 41-47. Ukpai, O. O. (2007). "Separating sand from the mud": Re-examining gender inequalities in Nigeria: Exploring the impacts and attitudes of men towards female genital cutting (FGC). (Order No. MR31636, Dalhousie University (Canada)). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses,177. Utz-Billing, I. & Kentenich, H. (2008). Female genital mutilation: An injury, physical and mental harm. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology, 29(4): 225-229 WHO (2008). Eliminating female genital mutilation: An interagency statement. Accessed on 12.07.2010 http://www.who.int/reproductive-health..