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A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector

This study examined how Zambia's menstruation leave policy, locally referred to as Mother's Day, influences the recruitment and retention of women in the financial and insurance sectors. As the only African nation to formalise menstruation leave, Zambia provided a distinctive context to explore the...

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Main Author: Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
Other Authors: Daya, Preeya
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
author2 Daya, Preeya
author_browse Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
Daya, Preeya
author_facet Daya, Preeya
Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
author_sort Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
collection Thesis
description This study examined how Zambia's menstruation leave policy, locally referred to as Mother's Day, influences the recruitment and retention of women in the financial and insurance sectors. As the only African nation to formalise menstruation leave, Zambia provided a distinctive context to explore the operation of gender-specific workplace policies within postcolonial African organisational settings. The research drew on qualitative data from 32 interviews with employees and managers across four organisations, revealing several key findings. Firstly, organisational size significantly shaped implementation approaches, with large organisations employing bureaucratic processes, medium organisations adopting hybrid practices, and small organisations favouring Ubuntu-inspired community-oriented methods. Secondly, a leadership policy paradox emerged, where senior women often avoided using menstruation leave to safeguard their professional credibility, thereby perpetuating stigma around its use. Thirdly, varying levels of cultural integration were observed, ranging from surface-level adoption to deeply embedded practices that reflected local values. Women adopted different strategies to navigate the policy, balancing health needs with career aspirations. These strategies highlighted the complicated interplay between professional identity, organisational context, and cultural dynamics. While the policy aimed to support women's workplace participation, its impact on recruitment and retention was nuanced, particularly when compounded by other types of leave such as maternity, sick, and study leave. Implementation challenges were shaped by implicit biases, practical difficulties, and societal stigma. This research contributes to the nascent discourse on menstruation leave policies in the Global South by extending Acker's (1990, 2006) theory of gendered organisations to postcolonial African contexts and applying the social ecological model to workplace policy implementation. It offers practical recommendations for organisations, including the development of size appropriate implementation guidelines. The findings underscore the need for gender-specific policies to move beyond symbolic compliance, fostering genuine workplace equity.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:40.116Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42148 A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector Chirwa, Memory Bwalya Daya, Preeya Zambia Mother's Day Financial sector This study examined how Zambia's menstruation leave policy, locally referred to as Mother's Day, influences the recruitment and retention of women in the financial and insurance sectors. As the only African nation to formalise menstruation leave, Zambia provided a distinctive context to explore the operation of gender-specific workplace policies within postcolonial African organisational settings. The research drew on qualitative data from 32 interviews with employees and managers across four organisations, revealing several key findings. Firstly, organisational size significantly shaped implementation approaches, with large organisations employing bureaucratic processes, medium organisations adopting hybrid practices, and small organisations favouring Ubuntu-inspired community-oriented methods. Secondly, a leadership policy paradox emerged, where senior women often avoided using menstruation leave to safeguard their professional credibility, thereby perpetuating stigma around its use. Thirdly, varying levels of cultural integration were observed, ranging from surface-level adoption to deeply embedded practices that reflected local values. Women adopted different strategies to navigate the policy, balancing health needs with career aspirations. These strategies highlighted the complicated interplay between professional identity, organisational context, and cultural dynamics. While the policy aimed to support women's workplace participation, its impact on recruitment and retention was nuanced, particularly when compounded by other types of leave such as maternity, sick, and study leave. Implementation challenges were shaped by implicit biases, practical difficulties, and societal stigma. This research contributes to the nascent discourse on menstruation leave policies in the Global South by extending Acker's (1990, 2006) theory of gendered organisations to postcolonial African contexts and applying the social ecological model to workplace policy implementation. It offers practical recommendations for organisations, including the development of size appropriate implementation guidelines. The findings underscore the need for gender-specific policies to move beyond symbolic compliance, fostering genuine workplace equity. 2025-11-07T10:57:37Z 2025-11-07T10:57:37Z 2025 2025-11-07T10:53:54Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42148 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Zambia
Mother's Day
Financial sector
Chirwa, Memory Bwalya
A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
title_full A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
title_fullStr A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
title_full_unstemmed A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
title_short A day to bleed: exploring the effects of Zambia's Mother's Day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
title_sort day to bleed exploring the effects of zambia s mother s day policy on the representation of women in the financial sector
topic Zambia
Mother's Day
Financial sector
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42148
work_keys_str_mv AT chirwamemorybwalya adaytobleedexploringtheeffectsofzambiasmothersdaypolicyontherepresentationofwomeninthefinancialsector
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