Health and Social Development

Authors: Chitra Akileswaran
Published: June 2005

This article employs ethnographic methods to study the motivations and sexual behaviors of migrant women between the ages of 15 and 45 living in informal settlements near Rustenburg, South Africa. We build on the prior literature on female mobility in South Africa, which describes a history of women who, under coercion to maintain the rural homestead in order to support the formal male migrant labor system, used migration as a means to escape. Our informants were not only driven by a desire to flee their destitute rural communities, but also by a need for autonomy that would enable them to provide for their families back home. Guided by women who had made the journey before them, our informants’ arrival was marked by a realization that their economic security rested solely on their ability to establish relationships with men, who served both as long-term lovers as well as shorter-term transactional pursuits. This article dissects the complex nature of these relationships, which cannot simply be reduced to prostitution. The varying power dynamics are especially evidence in the case of condom use, and suggest that while women exhibit instances of empowerment, they are highly vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases, particularly HIV.

Authors: Chitra Akileswaran
Published: October 2005

Given the ways in which South African migrant women are rapidly affecting and affected by the economic and health issues of the RBN, this study aimed to investigate the following phenomena: 1) the forces and experiences shaping female mobility in this particular mining area, 2) female migrants’ perceptions, attitudes, and behaviors towards and within the environments in which they live, 3) patterns of high risk sexual encounters within migrant women’s sexual networks and 4) female migrants’ experiences with violence, both within and outside intimate partner relationships.

Authors: J. Andrew Harris
Published: October 2005

This report was contracted by Mr. Matome Modipa, Managing Director of the Royal Bafokeng Economic Board in July of 2005. The approximately 500 households that were randomly sampled for this survey provide insight into demographic, eco- nomic, human and social capital, and opinion and well-being factors shaping the lives of Bafokeng today. The interviews took place in late August and early September of 2005. A team of 16 Bafokeng youth conducted the interviews, supported by Holiness Thebyane as the field coordinator, and 4 data entry assistants.

Authors: Dr. Sue Cook
Published: March 2005

Belinda Bozzoli’s book “Women of Phokeng” (1991) documents the consciousness, life strategies and migrancy patterns of women originating from this village in the former Western Transvaal from 1900-1983. In 2004, the authors conducted research in Phokeng that aimed to explore the nexus between formal education and local socio-economic realities through the perceptions and experiences of young women.

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