Literature Database on Gender in Subsahara Africa
Literature regarding Lesotho
agriculture ecology rural development climate change
Ansell, Nicola (2002): Secondary education reform in Lesotho and Zimbabwe and the needs of rural girls, Pronouncements, policy and practice, in: Comparative Education, vol. 38, no. 1, pp.91-112.[603]
Braun, Yvonne (2010): Gender, large-scale development and food insecurity in Lesotho, An analysis of the impact of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project, in: Gender and Development, vol. 18, no. 3, pp.453-464.[604]
Eldredge, Elizabeth (1990): Women in production: The economic role of women in nineteenth-century Lesotho, in: Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, vol. 16, no. 4, pp.707-731.[605]
Ferguson, James (1985): The bovine mystique, Power, property and livestock in rural Lesotho, in: MAN, no. 20, 647-674.[11961]
Gordon, Elizabeth (1978): The women left behind: A study of the wives of the migrant workers of Lesotho, ILO Publications, Geneva.[606]
Gordon, Elizabeth (1981): An analysis of the impact of labour migration on the lives of women in Lesotho, in: Journal of Development Studies, vol. 17, no. 3, pp.59-76.[607]
Khabele, M.K. / Moloi, F.L. et. al. (1985): Successful women’s projects: The case of the Lesotho National Council of Women, in: Muntemba, Shimwaayi M. (ed.): Rural women and development, Lessons from the field, ILO Publications, Geneva, pp.111-129.[608]
Kishondo, Paul (1993): Women, land and agriculture in Lesotho, ISAS Working Paper no. 4, in: Institute of Southern African Studies, ISAS Working Paper Series, Nos. 4-6, National University of Lesotho, Roma, pp.1-15.[609]
Mashinini, Vusi (2000): Gender and sustainable development in Lesotho, Some critical observations, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, no. 1, pp.94-106.[610]
Matobo, Thope / Makoae, Mokhantso (2000): Gender and household resource management in Lesotho, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, pp.133-159.[611]
Mueller, Martha (1977): Women and men, Power and powerless in Lesotho, in: Signs, Journal of Women in Culture and Society, vol. 3, pp.154-164. [612]
Naidoo, Kammila / Matsie, Rachel / Ochse, Angela (2011): ‘Resting’, AIDS-affliction and marital constraints, Engendered livelihood issues in the aftermath of Lesotho mineworkers retrenchments, in: Development Southern Africa, vol. 28, no. 5, pp.681-689.[613]
Ntabeni, Mary Nombulelo (2000): The impact of the second world war on Basotho women, Agricultural subsistence and the war effort, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, no. 1, pp.1-18.[614]
Palmer, Ingrid (1985): Lesotho, in: Palmer, Ingrid: The impact of male out-migration on women in farming, Women's roles and gender differences in development, Cases for Planners, Kumarian Publishers, West Hartford, pp.18-26.[615]
Patel, Krishna (1990): Women, the providers of food security in Lesotho, in: African Urban Quarterly, vol. 5, no. 3-4, pp. 292-295.[11960]
Pule, Neville / Matlosa, Khabele (2000): The impact of retrenched returnees of gender relations in rural Lesotho, Gender Issues Research Report Series, no. 10, OSSREA, Addis Abeba.[616]
Riley, Pamela Johnson (1993): Gender related factors influencing the viability of irrigation projects in Lesotho, in: Journal of African and Asia Studies, vol. 28, no. 3-4, pp.162-179.[617]
Romero-Daza, Nancy (1994): Multiple sexual partners, migrant labour, and the making for an epidemic, Knowledge and beliefs about AIDS among women in highland Lesotho, in: Human Organization, vol. 53, no. 2, pp.192-205.[618]
Safilios-Rothschild, Constantina (1985): The persistence of women's invisibility in agriculture: Theoretical and policy lessons from Lesotho and Sierra Leone, in: Economic Development and Cultural Change, vol. 33, no. 2, pp.299-317.[619]
Sweetman, Caroline (2001): ‘Sitting on a rock’, Men, socio-economic change, and development policy in Lesotho, in: Sweetman, Caroline (ed.): Men’s involvement in gender and development policy and practice, Beyond rhetoric, Oxfam Publications, Oxford, pp.71-79.[620]
Towle, Megan (2008): Community approaches to preventing mother-to-child HIV transmission: Perspectives from rural Lesotho, in: African Journal of AIDS Research vol. 7, no. 2, pp.219-228.[621]
UN Habitat (2005): Lesotho: Law, Land Tenure and Gender Review: Southern Africa, UN Habitat, Nairobi.[622]
arts and culture
Green-Simms, Lindsey / Z´étoile, Imma (2021): The possibilities and intimacies of Queer African screen cultures, in: Journal of African Cultural Studies Volume 33, pp. 1-19. [11762]
Van Wyk, Gary (1998): The mural art of Basotho women, in: African Arts, vol. 31, pp. 58-65.[1478]
economy - formal and informal employment
Baylies, Caroyln / Wright, Caroline (1993): Female labour in the textile and clothing industry in Lesotho, in: African Affairs, vol. 92, pp. 577-591.[1690]
Baylies, Caroyln / Wright, Caroline (1993): Female labour in the textile and clothing industry in Lesotho, in: African Affairs, vol. 92, pp. 577-591.[1691]
Boehm, Christian (2006): Industrial labour, marital strategy and changing livelihood trajectories among young women in Lesotho, in: Christiansen, Catrine / Utas, Mat / Vigh, Henrik (eds.) Navigating youth, generating adulthood, Social becoming in an African conext, Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala, pp. 153-182.[12345]
Gay, Judith (1980): Wage employment of rural Basutho women, A case study, in: South African Labour Bulletin, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 40-53.[1692]
Gibbs, Tim (2005): ‘Union boys and caps leading factory girls astray?’ The politics of labour reform in Lesotho’s ‘feminised’ garment industry, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 95-112.[1693]
Goebel, Allison / Epprecht, Marc (1995): Women and employment in Sub-Saharan Africa: Testing the World Bank and WID models with a Lesotho case study, in: African Studies Review, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 1-22.[1694]
Malahleha, G.M. (1985): Liquor brewing: A cottage industry in Lesotho shebeens, in: Journal of Eastern African Research and Development, vol. 15, pp. 45-55.[1695]
Mapetla, Matseliso (1996): Beer brewing and housing strategies in Lesotho, in: Schlyter, Ann (ed.): A place to live, Gender research on housing in Africa, Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala, pp. 144-159.[1696]
Mapetla, Matseliso (1998): Beer brewing as a survival strategy in urban Lesotho, in: Larsson, Anita (ed.): Changing gender relations in Southern Africa, Issues of urban life, Publications of the Institute of Southern African Studies, Roma, pp. 155-183.[1697]
Marlowe, Julia (1996): Opportunities for the employment of women in Lesotho. An analysis of the labour construction unit, in: Scandianvian Journal of Development Alternatives and Area Studies, vol. 15, pp. 90-101.[1698]
Marlowe, Julia / Setsbik, Anthony (1996): Opportunities for the employment of women in Lesotho: An analysis of the labour construction unit, in: Scandinavian Journal of Development Alternatives and Areas Studies, pp. 90-101[1699]
economy - Households
Ansell, Nicola / van Blerk, Lorraine (2004): Children’s migration as a household/family strategy, Coping with AIDS in Lesotho and Malawi, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 673-690.[1944]
Martin, William / Beittel, Mark (1987): The hidden abode of reproduction: Conceptualizing the households in Southern Africa, in: Development and Change, vol. 18, pp. 215-234.[1945]
Matobo, Thope / Makoae, Mokhantso (2000): Gender and household resource management in Lesotho, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, pp. 133-159.[1946]
Mokuku, Selloane (2005): Hear us, Shedding light on the plight of child domestic workers in Lesotho, UN, Maseru.[1948]
Murray, Colin (1987): Class, gender and the household: The development cycle in Southern Africa, in: Development and Change, vol. 18, pp. 235-249.[1947]
economy - markets and traders
no entries to this combination of country and topic
economy - pastoralism
no entries to this combination of country and topic
education schooling and tertiary education
Ansell, Nicola (2002): Secondary education reform in Lesotho and Zimbabwe and the needs of rural girls, Pronouncements, Policy, and practice, in: Comparative Education, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 91-112.[2691]
Attwood, Gillian et. al. (2004): ‘Women are lions in dresses’, Negotiating gender relations in REFLECT learning cycles in Lesotho, in: Routledge Studies in Literacy, vol. 1, pp. 139-158.[2692]
Keregero, Keregero J.B. (1995): Gender access and equity in the provision of adult education in Swaziland, in: Journal of AALAE, vol. 9, no. 1, pp.12-24.[2693]
Lephoto, Manthoto (1995): Educating women for empowerment in Lesotho, in: Convergence, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 5-13.[2694]
Makhotla, Likeleli / Hendriks, Sheryl (2004): Do home gardens improve the nutrition of rural pre-schoolers in Lesotho? in: Development Southern Africa, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 575-581.[2695]
Mturi, Akim (2003): Gender gap in school enrolement among younger youth in Lesotho, in: Development Southern Africa, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 491-504.[2696]
Nenty, Johnson (2000): Gender-typing, performance and achievement-related behaviour in mathematics by secondary school students, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 94-106.[2697]
Ntabeni, Mary (2003): Women’s history and the National Teacher Training College of Lesotho, in: Zwede, Bahru (ed.): Land, gender and the periphery, Themes in the history of Eastern and Southern Africa, OSSREA Publications, Addis Ababa, pp. 31-42.[2698]
health - fgc fgm
no entries to this combination of country and topic
health - HIV AIDS and gender
Ansell, Nicola / van Blerk, Lorraine (2004): Children’s migration as a household/family strategy, Coping with AIDS in Lesotho and Malawi, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 673-690.[3597]
Bloch, Ellen / McGrath, Will (2019): Infected kin, Orphan care and AIDS in Lesotho, Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick.[3598]
Oluwu, Dejo (2011): Gender vulnerabilities, sposal abuse and incidence of HIV in Lesotho, A case for an integrated rights-based approach, in: African Journal of AIDS Research, vol. 10, no. 3, pp. 235-246.[3599]
Romero-Daza, Nancy (1994): Multiple sexual partners, migrant labour and the making for an epidemic, Knowledge, beliefs about AIDS among women in highland Lesotho, in: Human Organisation, vol. 53, no. 2, pp. 192-211.[3600]
Towle, Megan (2008): Community approaches to preventing mother-to-child HIV transmission: Perspectives from rural Lesotho, in: African Journal of AIDS Research vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 219-228.[3601]
UN Theme Group on Gende and Reproductive Health (2005): Speaking out! Views of young Basotho on gender, sexuality, and sexual awareness, Government of Lesotho, Maseru.[3602]
health - reproduction and fertility
Huss-Ashmore, Rebecca (1988): Seasonal patterns of birth and conception in rural highland Lesotho, in: Human Biology, vol. 60, pp. 493-506.[4612]
Makatjane, Tiisetso (2002): Pre-marital sex and childbearing in Lesotho, in: African Population Studies, vol. 17, pp. 99-112.[4613]
Makatjane, Tiisetso J. / Chaka-Toeba, Nthabiseng (1999): Labour migration and duration of breastfeeding in Lesotho, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 3, pp. 19-36.[4614]
Mturi, Akim (2003): Parents’ attitudes to adolescent sexual behaviour in Lesotho, in: African Journal of Reproductive Health, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 25-33.[4615]
Mturi, Akim / Moerane, William (2001): Premarital childbearing among adolescents in Lesotho, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 259-276.[4616]
Mturi, Akim J. / Diamond, Ian D. / Tuoane, Maletela (2001): Patterns of sexual behaviour among young Basotho women, in: African Population Studies, vol. 16, pp. 71-86.[4617]
Potts, Deborah (2001): Fertility in Southern Africa, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 189-302.[4618]
Tuoane, Maletela (2003): Use of family planning in Lesotho, The importance of quality of care and access, in: African Population Studies, vol. 18, pp. 105-132.[4619]
health
no entries to this combination of country and topic
history colonialism and pre-colonial history
Burman, Sandra (1990): Fighting a two-pronged attack: The changing legal status of women in Cape-ruled Basutholand, 1872-1884, in: Walker, Cherryl (ed.): Women and gender in South Africa to 1945, London, pp. 48-75.[5328]
Eldredge, Elizabeth (1991): Women in production: The economic role of women in the nineteenth century Lesotho, in: Signs, Journal of Women in Culture and Society, vol. 16, no. 4, pp. 707-731.[5329]
Eldredge, Elizabeth (1993): A South African kingdom - The pursuit of security in nineteenth-century Lesotho, Cambridge.[5330]
Epprecht, Marc (1993): Domesticy and piety in colonial Lesotho: The private politics of Basotho women’s pious association, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 202-224.[5331]
Epprecht, Marc (1995): Women’s ‘conservatism’ and the politics of gender in late colonial Lesotho, in: Journal of African History, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 29-57.[5332]
Epprecht, Marc (1996): Gender and history in Southern Africa: A Lesotho „metanarrative“ in: Canadian Journal of African Studies, vol. 30, no. 2, pp. 183-213.[5333]
Epprecht, Marc (1998): Uncovering masculinity in Southern African history, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 118-134.[5334]
Epprecht, Marc (2000): ‘This matter of women is getting very bad’, Gender, development and politics in Colonial Lesotho, University of Natal Press, Durban. [5335]
Kimble, Judy (1982): Labour migration in Basutholand c.1870-1885, in: Marks, Shula / Rathbone, Richard (eds.): Industrialization and social change in South Africa - African class formation, culture, and consciousness, 1870-1930, New York, pp. 119-141.[5336]
Machobane, L.B.B.J. (2000): Gender, succession and dynastic politics, The saga of Senate and her son Motsoene Molapo Moshoeshoe, 1858-1930, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 19-41.[5337]
Maloko, Tshidiso (1997): Khomo Lia Oela: Canteens, brothels and labour migrancy in colonial Lesotho, 1900-1940, in: Journal of African History, vol. 38, pp. 101-122.[5338]
Ntabeni, Mary Nombulelo (2000): The impact of the second world war on Basotho women, Agricultural subsistence and the war effort, in: Review of Southern African Studies, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 1-18.[5339]
Olenja, Joyce (1991): Women in production: The economic role of women in nineteenth century Lesotho, in: Journal of Asian and African Studies, vol. 26, pp. 266-275.[5340]
Ranchod-Nilsson, Sita (2004): Colonialism and beyond: Gender and culture in recent histories of Tanzania, Ghana, and Lesotho, in: Journal of Women's History, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 213-220.[5341]
Literature
no entries to this combination of country and topic
media
no entries to this combination of country and topic
politics - wars violent conflicts
no entries to this combination of country and topic
politics
Makoa, Francis (1997): Gender and politics: A note om gender equality in Lesotho, in: Journal of Social Development in Africa, vol. 12, pp. 5-14[7257]
Morna, Coleen Lowe / Tolmay, Susan (2007): At the coalface, Gender and local government in Southern Africa, Gender Links, Johannesburg.[7258]
Sweetman, Caroline (2001): ‘Sitting on a rock’, Men, socio-economic change, and development policy in Lesotho, in: Sweetman, Caroline (ed.): Men’s involvement in gender and development policy and practice, Beyond rhetoric, Oxfam Publications, Oxford, pp. 71-79.[7259]
Viljoen, Frans / Nsibirwa, Martin (2006): Political participation of women in Lesotho, in: Comparative and International Law Journal, vol 39, no. 2, pp. 351- 360.[7260]
Religion - Christianity
Murray, Colin (1975): Sex, smoking and the shades, A Sotho symbolic idiom, in: Whisson, M.B. / West, M. (eds.): Religion and social change in Southern Africa, David Philip Publishers, Cape Town, pp. 58-77.[7654]
Religion - Islam
no entries to this combination of country and topic
Religion - traditional rituals and spirit mediumship
Murray, Colin (1975): Sex, smoking and the shades, A Sotho symbolic idiom, in: Whisson, M.B. / West, M. (eds.): Religion and social change in Southern Africa, David Philip Publishers, Cape Town, pp. 58-77.[10253]
Murray, Colin (1979): The work of men, women and the ancestors: Social reproduction in the periphery of Southern Africa, in: Wallman, Sandra (ed.): Social anthropology of work, Academic Press, London, New York, pp. 337-363.[10254]
Rights - human rights violations gender based violence
Chaka-Makhooane, Lisebo (2002): Sexual violence in Lesotho: The realities of justice for women, Women and Law in Southern Africa Research and Education Trust, Maseru.[10475]
Rights - Women Human Rights and legal system
Burman, Sandra (1990): Fighting a two-pronged attack: The changing legal status of women in Cape-ruled Basutholand, 1872-1884, in: Walker, Cherryl (ed.): Women and gender in South Africa to 1945, London, pp. 48-75.[11080]
Dingake, Oagile (2001): A critical analysis of women's access to land in the WLSA (Women and Law in Southern Africa) Countries: Botswana. Lesotho Malawi, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe, Women and Law in Southern Africa Research and Educational Trust, Harare.[11081]
Everett, Elizabeth (1997): Women’s rights, the family and organisational culture: A Lesotho case study, in: Gender and Development, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 54-59.[11082]
Fanana, N.A.M. (2001): Legal dualism and the rights of women, Thoughts for law reform in Lesotho, in: Lesotho Law Journal:, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 119-150.[11083]
Letuka, Puleng et al. (1996): Inhertiance in Lesotho, Women and Law in Southern Africa Research Project, Maseru.[11084]
Letuka, Puleng et al. (1997): Maintenance in Lesotho, Women and Law in Southern African Research Trust, Maseru.[11085]
Letuka, Puleng et al. (1998): Family belonging for women in Lesotho, Women and Law in Southern Africa Research Trust, Maseru.[11086]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1985): Women and development in Africa with special reference to the legal disabilities of married women in Lesotho, in. Journal of East African Research and Development, 15, pp. 164-170.[11087]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1986): Lesotho: Women, marriage, and the law, in: in: Schuler, Margaret (ed.): Empowerment and the law, Strategies of third world women, OEF Publications, Washington, pp. 126-134.[11088]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1989): Legal dualism in Lesotho, with particular reference to marriage and succession, in: Law and Anthropology, 4.[11089]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1991): Divorce law in Lesotho: A critical appraisal of guilt principle and the present grounds for divorce, in: Lesotho Law Journal, vol. 7, pp. 21-48.[11090]
Matete-Lieb, Tiisetso (1997): Frauen und Räume - geschlechtsspezifische Auswirkungen von Tradition und Gesetz in Lesotho, in: Frauen in der einen Welt - Zeitschrift für interkulturelle Frauenalltagsforschung, 2, pp. 64-76.[11091]
Modo, I.V.O. (2001): The changing family structure and legal lag in Lesotho: Implications for the future: African Anthropologist, vol. 8, pp. 69-84.[11092]
Poulter, Sebastian (1977): Marriage, divorce and legitimacy in Lesotho, in: Journal of African Law, vol. 21, no. 1, pp. 67-78.[11093]
Seeiso, Seitebatso / Kanono. L.M. et al. (1990): The legal situation of women in Lesotho, in: Stewart, J. / Armstrong, Alice (ed.): The legal situation of women in Southern Africa, University of Zimbabwe Publications, Harare, pp. 47-74.[11094]
Women and Law in Southern Africa Research Trust (WLSA) (2000): In search for justice, Where do women in Lesotho go? WLSA Publications, Morija.[11095]
Women and Law in Southern Africa Research Trust (WLSA) (2001): A critical analysis of women’s access to land in the WLSA countries, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe, WLSA Publication, Harare.[11096]
Women and Law in Southern Africa Research Trust (WLSA) (2002): Lobola, Its implications for women’s reproductive rights in Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe, Weaver Press, Harare.[11097]
society - families marriages
Ansell, Nicola / van Blerk, Lorraine (2004): Children’s migration as a household/family strategy, Coping with AIDS in Lesotho and Malawi, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 673-690.[8672]
Kimane, I. (1985): Images of Basotho women in society, their contributions to development, in: Journal of Eastern African Research and Development, vol. 15, 1985, pp. 180-187.[11959]
Murray, Colin (1977): High bridewealth, migrant labour and the position of women in Lesotho, in: Journal of African Law, vol. 21, pp. 79-96.[8713]
Murray, Colin (1976): Marital strategy in Lesotho: The redistribution of migrant earnings, in: African Studies, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 99-121.[8673]
Murray, Colin (1977): High bridewealth, migrant labour and the position of women in Lesotho, in: Journal of African Law, vol. 21, pp. 79-96.[8674]
Murray, Colin (1978): Migration, differentiation and the development cycle in Lesotho, in: Binsbergen, W. van / Meilink, H. (Hg.): Migration and the transformation of modern African society, Leiden.[8675]
Murray, Colin (1979): Migrant labour and changing family structures in the rural periphery of Southern Africa, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 139-156.[8676]
Murray, Colin (1979): The work of men, women and the ancestors: Social reproduction in the periphery of Southern Africa, in: Wallman, Sandra (ed.): Social anthropology of work, Academic Press, London, New York, pp. 337-363.[8677]
Murray, Colin (1981): Families divided, The impact of labour migration in Lesotho, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.[8678]
Murray, Colin (1987): Class, gender and the household: The development cycle in Southern Africa, in: Development and Change, vol. 18, pp. 235-249.[8679]
Ntimo-Makara, Matora (2009): Living with divorce, Expectations and Contradictions within the Lesotho, OSSREA, Addis Abeba.[8712]
society - homosexuality / sexual minorities
Green-Simms, Lindsey / Z´étoile, Imma (2021): The possibilities and intimacies of Queer African screen cultures, in: Journal of African Cultural Studies, vol. 33, pp. 1-19. [11763]
Morgan, Ruth / Wieringa, Saskia (eds.) (2005): Tommy boys, Lesbian men and ancestral wives, Female same-sex practices in Africa, Jacana Media, Johannesburg.[9049]
Spurlin, William (2007): Imperialisms within the margins, Queer representation and the politics of culture in Southern Africa, Palgrave, New York.[9050]
society - masculinities
no entries to this combination of country and topic
society - migration and urbanisation
Bonner, Phil (1990): ‘Desirable or undesirable Basotho women?’ Liquor, prostitution and the migration of Basotho women to the Rand, 1920-1945, in: Walker, Cherryl (ed.): Women and gender in South Africa to 1945, London, pp. 221-250.[9677]
Coplan, David (1987): Eloquent knowledge: Lesotho migrants’ songs and the anthropology of experience, in: American Anthropologist, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 413-434.[9678]
Coplan, David (2001): You have left me wandering about, Basutho women and the culture of mobility, in: Hodgson, Dorothy / McCurdy, Sheryl (eds.): „Wicked“ women and the reconfiguration of gender in Africa, James Currey Publishers, Oxford, pp. 188-211.[9679]
Dodson, Belinda (2000): Women on the move: Gender and cross-border migration to South Africa from Lesotho, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, in: McDonald, David A. (ed.): On borders: Perspectives on international migration in Southern Africa, St. Martin's Press, New York, pp. 119-150.[9680]
Gay, Judith (1984): Basutho women migrants: A case study, in: Bulletin of the Institute of Development Studies, vol. 11, pp. 19-28.[9681]
Gordon, Elizabeth (1981): An analysis of the impact of labour migration on the lives of women in Lesotho, in: Nelson, Nici (ed.): African women in the development process, London, pp. 59-76.[9682]
Gordon, Elizabeth (1978): The women left behind, A study of wives of the migrant workers of Lesotho, ILO Publications, Geneva.[9683]
Gordon, Elizabeth (1994): The plight of the women of Lesotho, Reconsideration with the decline of apartheid, in: Journal of Black Studies, vol. 24, pp. 435-446.[9684]
Kimane, Itumeleng / Ntimo-Makara, Matora M. (1998): The gender dimension of urban migration in Lesotho, in: Larsson, Anita / Mapetla, Matseliso / Schlyter, Ann (eds.): Changing gender relations in Southern Africa: Issues of urban life, Institute of Southen African Studies, National University of Lesotho, Roma.[9685]
Kimble, Judy (1982): Labour migration in Basutholand c.1870-1885, in: Marks, Shula / Rathbone, Richard (eds.): Industrialization and social change in South Africa - African class formation, culture, and consciousness, 1870-1930, New York, pp. 119-141.[9686]
Maloko, Tshidiso (1997): Khomo Lia Oela: Canteens, brothels and labour migrancy in colonial Lesotho, 1900-1940, in: Journal of African History, vol. 38, pp. 101-122.[9687]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1985): Women and development in Africa with special reference to the legal disabilities of married women in Lesotho, in. Journal of East African Research and Development, 15, pp. 164-170.[9688]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1986): Lesotho: Women, marriage, and the law, in: in: Schuler, Margaret (Hg.): Empowerment and the law, Strategies of third world women, OEF Publications, Washington, pp. 126-134.[9689]
Mamashela, Mthokoa (1991): Divorce law in Lesotho: A critical appraisal of guilt principle and the present grounds for divorce, in: Lesotho Law Journal, vol. 7, pp. 21-48.[9690]
Mapetla, Matseliso (1999): Gendered access to land and housing in Lesotho, in: Agenda, no. 42, pp. 70-77.[9691]
Murray, Colin (1976): Marital strategy in Lesotho: The redistribution of migrant earnings, in: African Studies, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 99-121.[9692]
Murray, Colin (1977): High bridewealth, migrant labour and the position of women in Lesotho, in: Journal of African Law, vol. 21, pp. 79-96.[9693]
Murray, Colin (1978): Migration, differentiation and the development cycle in Lesotho, in: Binsbergen, W. van / Meilink, H. (Hg.): Migration and the transformation of modern African society, Leiden.[9694]
Murray, Colin (1979): Migrant labour and changing family structures in the rural periphery of Southern Africa, in: Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 139-156.[9695]
Murray, Colin (1979): The work of men, women and the ancestors: Social reproduction in the periphery of Southern Africa, in: Wallman, Sandra (ed.): Social anthropology of work, Academic Press, London, New York, pp. 337-363.[9696]
Murray, Colin (1981): Families divided, The impact of labour migration in Lesotho, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.[9697]
Murray, Colin (1987): Class, gender and the household: The development cycle in Southern Africa, in: Development and Change, vol. 18, pp. 235-249.[9698]
Palmer, Ingrid (1985): The impact of male out-migration on women farming, Kumarian Press, West Hartford.[9699]
Spiegel, Andrew (1980): Rural differentiation and the diffusion of migrant labour remittances in Lesotho, in: Mayer, Peter (ed.): Black villagers in an industrial society, Anthropological perspectives on labour migration in South Africa, Oxford, pp. 109-169.[9700]
Spiegel, Andrew (1980): Changing patterns of migration and rural differentiation in Lesotho, in: Social Dynamics, 8, 2, pp. 30-45.[9701]
Sweetman, Caroline (1995): The miners return: Changing gender relations in Lesotho’s ex-migrants’ families, Gender Analysis in Development Series, No. GAID 9, School of Development Studies, University of East Anglia, Noorwich.[9702]
Ulicke, Theresa / Crush, Jonathan (2000): Gender, farmwork, and women`s migration from Lesotho to the new South Africa, in: Canadian Journal of African Studies, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 64-79.[9703]
Wilkinson, C.R. (1983): Migration in Lesotho: Some comparative aspects, with particular reference to the role of women, in: Geography, vol. 68, pp. 208-224.[9704]
Wilkinson, C.R. (1987): Women, migration and work in Lesotho, in: Momson, Janet / Townsend, Janet (eds.): Geography of gender in the third world, London, pp. 225-239.[9705]
society - women's organisations
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