Abstract

The Nigerian military state has used gender politics for its own ends, exploiting opportunities afforded by international concern with women. The high- ly publicized program for rural enabled regime of Babangida to gain international credibility. The Abacha regime did not seek or win international sup- port, but sought to upstage gender politics of their predecessors locally by mounting more broadly populist programs which promised benefits to the family and further reinscribed within highly limited reproductive roles. Because Nigerian civil society has been so reluctant to engage with gender, military have been able to appropriate terrain they refer to as women development for their own ends. Through a series of high profile programs, they have neutralized potentially subversive and inherently antimilitarist notion of women's libera- tion, and propagated a gender politics which normalizes military rule.

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