My article is titled "Female Empowerment in Nigeria." I didn't put the whole article in my sandbox as you can see, I only put the intro and the section of the article that I'm focusing on.

Nigerian women

Female empowerment in Nigeria is an economic process that involves empowering Nigerian women as a poverty reduction measure.[1] Empowerment is the development of women in term of politics, social and economic strength in nation development. It is also a way of reducing women vulnerability and dependency in all sphere of life.It can be noted that the aggregate of educational, political, health and legal empowerment are key to women empowerment in Nigeria.[2] Like many African women, Nigerian women have a subordinate role to their male counterparts. There are twice as many women below the poverty line than men, and up to 19 times as many men in executive positions than women. [3]

Political and Financial Constraints edit

Women are nearly non-existent on the Nigerian political scene, more so at the federal and state levels.[4]Male domination of decision-making and violence has led to women not feeling free and comfortable enough to engage in political matters. Additionally, successful political advisors are not likely to support female candidates so it could be difficult for them to pave a path in politics. [5] There are major differentiations when it comes to starting businesses and getting credit loans for men vs. women in Nigeria. When women in business have fewer employees and shorter longevity than men, this gender gap becomes even wider.[6]Within the countries of Tunisia and Zimbabwe, women business owners worked in time intervals throughout the day. The time involved in maintaining a business with little pay was undesirably restrictive and directly conflicted with their family responsibilities.[7] There have been experimental techniques to expand women-led businesses in Nigeria such as advocating start-ups and productivity through grants, mentoring and business technical training.[8] A program by the name of YouWiN! gave insight to young men and women on how to carry out their business ideas and conquer certain challenges that come with starting a business.[9]

1) What have you done to revise/add on to your Wikipedia article? If there's anything you still have left to do, what is it? I added to the end of the intro paragraph and made a whole new section.

2) What's going well? What are you most proud of so far? It wasn't't too hard to find information.

3) What specific places in the article do you want feedback on from your peers? The paragraph that I added above, and if the sources seem like it's coming from a credible place

  1. ^ Okemakinde, Timothy (2014). "Women Education: Implications for National Development in Nigeria". European Journal of Globalization and Development Research,. 9. ISSN 2220-7414.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  2. ^ CHINEKEZI NWAIGWE, STELLA (1 December 2014). "Education as a Tool for Women Empowerment in Nigeria" (PDF). Journal of Resourcefulness and Distinction. 9: 2. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  3. ^ “Browse the Library.” Challenges Facing Women Empowerment in Contemporary Nigeria | Gender Hub, www.genderhub.org/get-in-the-know/resource-library/challenges-facing-women-empowerment-in-contemporary-nigeria/.
  4. ^ “Browse the Library.” Challenges Facing Women Empowerment in Contemporary Nigeria | Gender Hub, www.genderhub.org/get-in-the-know/resource-library/challenges-facing-women-empowerment-in-contemporary-nigeria/.
  5. ^ “Browse the Library.” Challenges Facing Women Empowerment in Contemporary Nigeria | Gender Hub, www.genderhub.org/get-in-the-know/resource-library/challenges-facing-women-empowerment-in-contemporary-nigeria/.
  6. ^ “The Road to Female Economic Empowerment.” The Republic, 26 Feb. 2017, www.republic.com.ng/vol1-no1/the-road-to-female-economic-empowerment/.
  7. ^ “The Road to Female Economic Empowerment.” The Republic, 26 Feb. 2017, www.republic.com.ng/vol1-no1/the-road-to-female-economic-empowerment/.
  8. ^ “The Road to Female Economic Empowerment.” The Republic, 26 Feb. 2017, www.republic.com.ng/vol1-no1/the-road-to-female-economic-empowerment/.
  9. ^ “The Road to Female Economic Empowerment.” The Republic, 26 Feb. 2017, www.republic.com.ng/vol1-no1/the-road-to-female-economic-empowerment/.