The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria

The paper seeks to establish the role of religion and culture in the realization of women’s rights to property in Nigeria. It begins by affirming that protecting women’s rights to property in Nigeria is a fundamental step towards achieving the 5th Sustainable Development Goal of gender equality. The...

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Main Authors: Oluwakemi D. Udoh, Sheriff F. Folarin, Victor A. Isumonah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Cogent Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2020.1750244
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spelling doaj-80b1343c65834743be189e701d95db842021-06-21T13:17:41ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Arts & Humanities2331-19832020-01-017110.1080/23311983.2020.17502441750244The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in NigeriaOluwakemi D. Udoh0Sheriff F. Folarin1Victor A. Isumonah2Covenant UniversityCovenant UniversityUniversity of IbadanThe paper seeks to establish the role of religion and culture in the realization of women’s rights to property in Nigeria. It begins by affirming that protecting women’s rights to property in Nigeria is a fundamental step towards achieving the 5th Sustainable Development Goal of gender equality. The promotion and protection of these rights in any society are determined by several factors such as the customs, prevailing traditions, as well as the religious laws that control behavioral patterns in that society. In discussing this within the Nigerian context, the paper explores the tenets of Christianity and Islam that govern women’s rights to property. The study used secondary data derived from articles that were sourced from Google Scholar. A total of nine articles was reviewed. The paper reveals that, culturally, women are viewed as inferior to men, and a male-child is generally celebrated and allotted higher portions of properties. However, the tenets of both Islam and Christianity do not disregard the woman in terms of property rights. The authors suggest that the prevailing discrimination against women has no religion backing, but a misguided exploitation of the low educational status of women in Nigeria.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2020.1750244religionculturewomen’s rightspropertyinheritance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oluwakemi D. Udoh
Sheriff F. Folarin
Victor A. Isumonah
spellingShingle Oluwakemi D. Udoh
Sheriff F. Folarin
Victor A. Isumonah
The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
Cogent Arts & Humanities
religion
culture
women’s rights
property
inheritance
author_facet Oluwakemi D. Udoh
Sheriff F. Folarin
Victor A. Isumonah
author_sort Oluwakemi D. Udoh
title The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
title_short The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
title_full The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
title_fullStr The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed The influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in Nigeria
title_sort influence of religion and culture on women’s rights to property in nigeria
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Arts & Humanities
issn 2331-1983
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The paper seeks to establish the role of religion and culture in the realization of women’s rights to property in Nigeria. It begins by affirming that protecting women’s rights to property in Nigeria is a fundamental step towards achieving the 5th Sustainable Development Goal of gender equality. The promotion and protection of these rights in any society are determined by several factors such as the customs, prevailing traditions, as well as the religious laws that control behavioral patterns in that society. In discussing this within the Nigerian context, the paper explores the tenets of Christianity and Islam that govern women’s rights to property. The study used secondary data derived from articles that were sourced from Google Scholar. A total of nine articles was reviewed. The paper reveals that, culturally, women are viewed as inferior to men, and a male-child is generally celebrated and allotted higher portions of properties. However, the tenets of both Islam and Christianity do not disregard the woman in terms of property rights. The authors suggest that the prevailing discrimination against women has no religion backing, but a misguided exploitation of the low educational status of women in Nigeria.
topic religion
culture
women’s rights
property
inheritance
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2020.1750244
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