Despite gender equity concerns in education emerging as a key area of interventions and debates within the global justice arena, the educational needs of pregnant schoolgirls and student-mothers have received minimal attention. This research is an attempt to make visible the experiences of young mothers from a rural community in Kenya and their efforts to realise their right to edu-cation. By interrogating the policy environment that guides the education of student-mothers and their lived experiences at schools, households and neighbourhoods, this research unveils how material and discursive dimensions of gender relations interact with other factors such as insecure livelihoods to mitigate schooling for student-mothers. The research findings point to the positive agency and resilience of student-mothers and its potential to transform gendered ideologies that seek to confine motherhood to the private sphere as they participate in formal education as pregnant schoolgirls and mothers.

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Okwany, Auma
hdl.handle.net/2105/8766
Women, Gender, Development (WGD)
International Institute of Social Studies

Wekesa, Alice Nelima. (2010, December 17). Bending the private-public gender norms: negotiating schooling for young mothers from low-income households in Kenya. Women, Gender, Development (WGD). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2105/8766