Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban

The main focus of this research study was exploring gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban. The main objectives of the study were to firstly to find out the views of men and women with regards to the process of voter registration in Gweru Urban. Secondly, the study sought t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Madamombe, Rumbidzai
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3364
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905319869087744
author Madamombe, Rumbidzai
author_facet Madamombe, Rumbidzai
author_sort Madamombe, Rumbidzai
collection DSpace
description The main focus of this research study was exploring gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban. The main objectives of the study were to firstly to find out the views of men and women with regards to the process of voter registration in Gweru Urban. Secondly, the study sought to unravel the perception and attitudes of men and women towards voting and its relevance in Gweru Urban. Its last objective was to explore the push factors behind voting for men and women in Gweru Urban. A descriptive research design was used for this study and two research instruments used, namely – questionnaires and interviews. The target population for the study were mainly the man and women in Gweru urban as well as stakeholders in the area. The study findings revealed that men generally have positive attitudes and perceptions with regards to voting in Gweru urban than women. The study recommended that there be more education, gender awareness, more access to information as well as improvement of voting systems to enhance men and women’s participation in voting.
id ir-11408-3364
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Midlands State University
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-33642022-06-27T13:49:04Z Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban Madamombe, Rumbidzai Gender Gendered perceptions Attitudes Women The main focus of this research study was exploring gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban. The main objectives of the study were to firstly to find out the views of men and women with regards to the process of voter registration in Gweru Urban. Secondly, the study sought to unravel the perception and attitudes of men and women towards voting and its relevance in Gweru Urban. Its last objective was to explore the push factors behind voting for men and women in Gweru Urban. A descriptive research design was used for this study and two research instruments used, namely – questionnaires and interviews. The target population for the study were mainly the man and women in Gweru urban as well as stakeholders in the area. The study findings revealed that men generally have positive attitudes and perceptions with regards to voting in Gweru urban than women. The study recommended that there be more education, gender awareness, more access to information as well as improvement of voting systems to enhance men and women’s participation in voting. 2018-11-19T14:04:06Z 2018-11-19T14:04:06Z 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3364 en open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Gender
Gendered perceptions
Attitudes
Women
Madamombe, Rumbidzai
Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title_full Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title_fullStr Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title_full_unstemmed Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title_short Gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in Gweru Urban
title_sort gendered perceptions and attitudes towards voting in gweru urban
topic Gender
Gendered perceptions
Attitudes
Women
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3364
work_keys_str_mv AT madamomberumbidzai genderedperceptionsandattitudestowardsvotingingweruurban