Building a culture of peace and nonviolence : enhancing Shona Traditional Court Systems
Date
2022-03
Authors
Makore, Brian Tazvitya
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Abstract
In traditional Shona culture, as in other Ubuntu societies, gender roles are given and traditional
leaders have no other way of knowing than hegemonic discourses which draw on dominant
cultural, traditional and religious value systems which produce patriarchal norms and rules of
behavior that are internalized as beliefs and customs. Without conscientisation, Shona
traditional leaders remain bonded to the hegemonic construction of traditional masculinities
and contrary to their peacebuilding role, they may unconsciously participate in the oppression
of women and other vulnerable groups who may not belong to the dominant cultural groups.
The problem forms the major motivation behind the study which aimed to train a critical mass
of Shona traditional leaders in Ward 3 and Ward 11 of Murehwa District under Chief
Mangwende in Mashonaland East Province of Zimbabwe for transformation into gendersensitive active nonviolent role models.
Through a participatory action research design, Kemmis et al. (2014), the thesis developed and
tested an integrated framework for the analysis and design of a discursive intervention in
oppressive gender relations. The analytical framework was informed theoretically by Connell
and Messerschmidt’s (2005) concept of hegemonic masculinities and Bell’s (2013) four I’s of
oppression and methodologically by Fairclough’s (2013) dialectical relational approach. The
action framework was informed theoretically by Bajaj’s (2019) critical peace education (CPE)
and methodologically Freire’s (1964, 2005) transformative learning.
At the philosophical level, the study combined Bhaskar’s (1979, 2016) transformational model
of social activity, (TMSA) and applied this to European Commission’s (2013) definition of
gender education (GE) to develop a transformational model of peace education (TMPE) which
I shall term, gender transformative education (GTE) Furthermore, the study combined Connell
and Messerschmidt’s (2005) concept of hegemonic masculinities, Freire’s (2005)
transformative learning and Kolb’s (1983) learning cycle to develop the attendant learning
cycle which I shall term critical masculinities learning cycle (CMLC). The models explicitly
identified conditions in which traditional Shona masculinities were not be compatible with
peace and justice and, simultaneously, the possibility for transforming gender relations in
traditional Shona culture. As regards peace research, a key innovation of the study was to critique some of the premises
and the constructs underpinning mainstream studies in gender, violence and peacebuilding and
the need of these sub-disciplines to constantly reflect on issues of hegemony and ideology in a
historically and dynamically informed manner, while at the same time insisting on action to
transform asymmetrical gender power relations. A gender training manual has been produced
from the findings of the study: it is intended to serve as a template for traditional leaders to
acquire gender transformative values and knowledge and to develop gender transformative
skills and attitudes that are necessary conditions to live in harmony with themselves, others and
their environments.
Description
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy: Public Administration-Peace Studies, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2022.
Keywords
Ubuntu, Shona traditional leaders, Peacebuilding, Nonviolence
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4207