TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding the roles of Alternative Rites of Passage and Public Declarations in FGM/C abandonment: an ethnographic study among the Loita Maasai, Kenya
AU - Van Bavel, Hannelore
AU - Partoip, Seleyian Agnes
AU - Koyie, Hellen Topishia
AU - Parkiswa, Sylvester
AU - Maibayu, Daniel
AU - Kimani, Samuel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - This article reports on ethnographic research on ongoing changes in FGM/C among the Maasai community of the Loita Hills, southwest Kenya. The study identified the individual, social, material, and institutional factors that sustain FGM/C in Loita. It then examined how these factors changed under the influence interventions by the nongovernmental organisation S.A.F.E., national anti-FGM/C legislation, school-based education, and religion. S.A.F.E.‘s song performances weakened the social taboo that prevented people from discussing FGM/C; their alternative rite of passage (ARP) made it possible to abandon FGM/C while continuing other elements of the initiation ceremony; the blessing of the ARP by the cultural leadership made not-cutting culturally acceptable; and the public declaration addressed some concerns around the social consequences of not-cutting. Anti-FGM/C legislation drove the practice underground and reinforced its meanings as an ethnic identity marker. School-based education changed people's socio-economic circumstances, facilitating the abandonment of FGM/C without the need to replace it with an LRP. Protestant Loitai initiated their daughters through a religious initiation rite. Together, these influence contributed to the incremental decline of FGM/C in Loita. However, half of the community seems to continue practising FGM/C, because of its meanings that go beyond initiation into adulthood and/or because of continued concerns around the social consequences of not-cutting. Sustained efforts that dynamically adapt to the ever-changing social realities, including potential resurgences in prevalence, can support the community on its path towards total abandonment.
AB - This article reports on ethnographic research on ongoing changes in FGM/C among the Maasai community of the Loita Hills, southwest Kenya. The study identified the individual, social, material, and institutional factors that sustain FGM/C in Loita. It then examined how these factors changed under the influence interventions by the nongovernmental organisation S.A.F.E., national anti-FGM/C legislation, school-based education, and religion. S.A.F.E.‘s song performances weakened the social taboo that prevented people from discussing FGM/C; their alternative rite of passage (ARP) made it possible to abandon FGM/C while continuing other elements of the initiation ceremony; the blessing of the ARP by the cultural leadership made not-cutting culturally acceptable; and the public declaration addressed some concerns around the social consequences of not-cutting. Anti-FGM/C legislation drove the practice underground and reinforced its meanings as an ethnic identity marker. School-based education changed people's socio-economic circumstances, facilitating the abandonment of FGM/C without the need to replace it with an LRP. Protestant Loitai initiated their daughters through a religious initiation rite. Together, these influence contributed to the incremental decline of FGM/C in Loita. However, half of the community seems to continue practising FGM/C, because of its meanings that go beyond initiation into adulthood and/or because of continued concerns around the social consequences of not-cutting. Sustained efforts that dynamically adapt to the ever-changing social realities, including potential resurgences in prevalence, can support the community on its path towards total abandonment.
KW - female genital mutilation
KW - FGM
KW - FGM/C
KW - alternative rites of passage
KW - public declaration
KW - Maasai
KW - Kenya
KW - pastoralists
KW - development
KW - human rights
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85189374905&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116412
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116412
M3 - Article
VL - 359
SP - n/a
JO - Social Science & Medicine
JF - Social Science & Medicine
SN - 0277-9536
IS - n/a
M1 - 116412
ER -