Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Empowerment Among Underprivileged Females in Egypt's Community Schools: A Qualitative Study on Their Lived Experiences

While education is globally framed as a tool of empowerment, its transformative potential for underprivileged females in rural Upper Egypt is often constrained by deeply-rooted social norms and structural poverty. This study investigates this paradox within the context of Egypt’s community schools (...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gedawy, Eman Kamal
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:While education is globally framed as a tool of empowerment, its transformative potential for underprivileged females in rural Upper Egypt is often constrained by deeply-rooted social norms and structural poverty. This study investigates this paradox within the context of Egypt’s community schools (CS), an educational model designed to bridge different forms of inequalities. Although existing scholarship has explored the CS model as a vehicle for community development, less attention has been paid to the specific, lived experience of empowerment from the perspective of the female students. This research moves beyond broader community views to center the intersectional, subjective realities of graduates, answering: How do underprivileged females in Egypt’s CS experience empowerment, and how do their intersecting identities shape this experience? This study employs a qualitative feminist research paradigm, which is an approach that centers the voices of marginalized groups to challenge power imbalances in knowledge production and privileges the subjective, co-constructed meanings of participants’ lived experiences (Harding,1987; Hesse-Biber & Leavy, 2011). Using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA), data was gathered through in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 31 females aged 18+ of CS in the Fayoum and Assiut governorates. The findings from these interviews were analyzed using Sen’s capability theory, Rawls’ theory of justice, Kabeer’s female empowerment framework, and Crenshaw’s intersectionality theory. Findings reveal that empowerment is a complex process, not a simple outcome. Furthermore, it posits that it has many forms, definitions, and faces. These definitions are not universal and should not be pre-defined; instead, they must be defined by the people themselves. This study contributes a phenomenological understanding grounded in the participants’ own narratives, concluding that for these females, empowerment is defined by their own lived experiences which are shaped by different intersecting factors.