Born into Bondage? Iklan Lives along the Rural-Urban continuum (Tuareg, Sahel)
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
Description
This article considers the predicament of a low-status Tuareg woman living close by her former master’s family in rural central Niger in 2010; for the family, she maintained the status of taklit ("slave descendant", feminine singular of "iklan"), somewhere along the spectrum between paid family servant and domestic slave. Analysis focuses on why she and so many like her have not managed to improve their life chances by moving to town, despite the Nigérien ban on slavery. Relevant factors include her lack of a family support network, the continued impact of prejudice against former slaves, a fear of possibly worsening her economic standing via such a move, and the strong moral compulsion of ordained gender roles in Sahelian cities. Former mistresses/masters also resisted the departure of women like her from wealthy herding households because of their housework contribution and their crucial role in producing the next generation of workers.
Date of Publication
2020-10-19
Publication Type
Article
Keyword(s)
Niger
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Sahel
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Tuareg
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Iklan
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social status
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post-slavery
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gender
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children's rights
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Additional Credits
Series
Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage
Publisher
Routledge. Taylor and Francis Group
ISSN
2161-9468
Access(Rights)
restricted