Enabling women to become Motorcycle Taxi Operators: Opportunities and Obstacles in Rural Liberia – Policy brief

This study researched female motorcycle taxi riders and female passengers in the rural areas of Liberia

Abstract

ReCAP commissioned Swansea University and AKA Research to undertake a gender mainstreaming project in Sierra Leone that would establish the main barriers and challenges women experience in becoming motorcycle riders in rural settings and how these can be overcome through training, credit, awareness, and policy change. A detailed study of female motorcycle taxi riders and female passengers in the rural areas around the provincial Sierra Leonean towns of Bo, Kenema and Makeni was conducted using a mixed methods approach (qualitative and quantitative data collection methods). This brief provides policy recommendations based on the conclusions of the research.

This project is funded by DFID under the Applied Research on Rural Roads and Transport Services through Community Access Programmes in Africa and Asia (AFCAP2 and AsCAP)

Citation

Swansea University & AKA Research (2017). Enabling women to become Motorcycle Taxi Operators: Opportunities and Obstacles in Rural Sierra Leone – Policy brief. London: ReCAP for DFID.

Enabling women to become Motorcycle Taxi Operators: Opportunities and Obstacles in Rural Liberia – Policy brief

Updates to this page

Published 30 November 2017