Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers
In virtually all societies, the managers of indigenous knowledge (IK) systems that deal with the development, care and well-being of women and children are senior women, or grandmothers. In that function, grandmothers are expected to advise and sup...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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okr-10986-107452021-04-23T14:02:52Z Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers Aubel, Judi ADULT EDUCATION ADULT LEARNING BEHAVIOR CHANGE BURNS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD NUTRITION COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMUNITY PROGRAMS CULTURAL VALUES EARLY CHILDHOOD EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION ACTIVITIES FAMILIES GENDER HEALTH EDUCATION INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR INFANT HEALTH INFANTS INFORMATION PROCESSING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS INTERVENTION ISOLATION KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS LEARNING MOTIVATION NGOS NON-FORMAL EDUCATION NUTRITION NUTRITION EDUCATION PREGNANT WOMEN RECOGNITION RURAL AREAS SOCIALIZATION WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN YOUTH In virtually all societies, the managers of indigenous knowledge (IK) systems that deal with the development, care and well-being of women and children are senior women, or grandmothers. In that function, grandmothers are expected to advise and supervise the younger generations. However, most development programs neither acknowledge their influence, nor explicitly involve them in efforts to strengthen existing family and community survival strategies. Many discussions of indigenous knowledge tend to be rather narrow, in two respects. First, IK is often presented in terms of specific knowledge and practices, or "nuggets of traditional wisdom" in relative isolation from the community knowledge authorities and systems of which such knowledge is a part. Second, many discussions of IK, point to the beneficial elements of traditional knowledge and practice while completely ignoring the harmful elements. Andreas Fuglesang, Swedish communication for development expert, discussed the central role played by elders in information management in traditional cultures. He described the function of elders as the "information storage and processing unit" of a society, like the hard drive on a computer. He described their critical role in ensuring continuity between the knowledge and values of their forefathers and the needs of younger generations preparing for life in the future. Gender is another important dimension of the management of IK systems. In most societies, many roles are gender-specific, and, therefore, the expertise of elder men and elder women differs. As regards expertise related to the growth and development of young children, and to the well-being of women of reproductive age (WRA), it is clearly senior women, or grandmothers, who have greater experience and greater knowledge. The individual behavior change orientation, widely adopted around the world, tends to focus on WRA while largely ignoring the socio-cultural systems of which they are a part, and in which elder family members play an influential role. 2012-08-13T13:00:48Z 2012-08-13T13:00:48Z 2006-02 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/02/6654051/grandmothers-promote-maternal-child-health-role-indigenous-knowledge-systems-managers http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10745 English Indigenous Knowledge (IK) Notes; No. 89 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research Africa |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
ADULT EDUCATION ADULT LEARNING BEHAVIOR CHANGE BURNS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD NUTRITION COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMUNITY PROGRAMS CULTURAL VALUES EARLY CHILDHOOD EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION ACTIVITIES FAMILIES GENDER HEALTH EDUCATION INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR INFANT HEALTH INFANTS INFORMATION PROCESSING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS INTERVENTION ISOLATION KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS LEARNING MOTIVATION NGOS NON-FORMAL EDUCATION NUTRITION NUTRITION EDUCATION PREGNANT WOMEN RECOGNITION RURAL AREAS SOCIALIZATION WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN YOUTH |
spellingShingle |
ADULT EDUCATION ADULT LEARNING BEHAVIOR CHANGE BURNS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHILD NUTRITION COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMUNITY PROGRAMS CULTURAL VALUES EARLY CHILDHOOD EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION ACTIVITIES FAMILIES GENDER HEALTH EDUCATION INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR INFANT HEALTH INFANTS INFORMATION PROCESSING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS INTERVENTION ISOLATION KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS LEARNING MOTIVATION NGOS NON-FORMAL EDUCATION NUTRITION NUTRITION EDUCATION PREGNANT WOMEN RECOGNITION RURAL AREAS SOCIALIZATION WORKERS YOUNG CHILDREN YOUTH Aubel, Judi Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
geographic_facet |
Africa |
relation |
Indigenous Knowledge (IK) Notes; No. 89 |
description |
In virtually all societies, the managers
of indigenous knowledge (IK) systems that deal with the
development, care and well-being of women and children are
senior women, or grandmothers. In that function,
grandmothers are expected to advise and supervise the
younger generations. However, most development programs
neither acknowledge their influence, nor explicitly involve
them in efforts to strengthen existing family and community
survival strategies. Many discussions of indigenous
knowledge tend to be rather narrow, in two respects. First,
IK is often presented in terms of specific knowledge and
practices, or "nuggets of traditional wisdom" in
relative isolation from the community knowledge authorities
and systems of which such knowledge is a part. Second, many
discussions of IK, point to the beneficial elements of
traditional knowledge and practice while completely ignoring
the harmful elements. Andreas Fuglesang, Swedish
communication for development expert, discussed the central
role played by elders in information management in
traditional cultures. He described the function of elders as
the "information storage and processing unit" of a
society, like the hard drive on a computer. He described
their critical role in ensuring continuity between the
knowledge and values of their forefathers and the needs of
younger generations preparing for life in the future. Gender
is another important dimension of the management of IK
systems. In most societies, many roles are gender-specific,
and, therefore, the expertise of elder men and elder women
differs. As regards expertise related to the growth and
development of young children, and to the well-being of
women of reproductive age (WRA), it is clearly senior women,
or grandmothers, who have greater experience and greater
knowledge. The individual behavior change orientation,
widely adopted around the world, tends to focus on WRA while
largely ignoring the socio-cultural systems of which they
are a part, and in which elder family members play an
influential role. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
Aubel, Judi |
author_facet |
Aubel, Judi |
author_sort |
Aubel, Judi |
title |
Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
title_short |
Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
title_full |
Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
title_fullStr |
Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Grandmothers Promote Maternal and Child Health : The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems' Managers |
title_sort |
grandmothers promote maternal and child health : the role of indigenous knowledge systems' managers |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/02/6654051/grandmothers-promote-maternal-child-health-role-indigenous-knowledge-systems-managers http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10745 |
_version_ |
1764414220141592576 |