VBP Girls’ Learn to Ride Program: Lunsar, Sierra Leone

VBP Girls’ Learn to Ride Program: Lunsar, Sierra Leone. Bicycles Create Change.com 7th Jan 2020
Image: Laurens Hof

My PhD fieldwork in Sierra Leone looks at how bicycles feature in African girls’ access to education. Although there is a paucity of empirical research in this area, there are still projects working in this area. One research project that has been an invaluable resource for me, is Laurens Hof’s Master thesis entitled: Teaching girls how to ride a bicycle: gender and cycling in Lunsar, Sierra Leone.

Laurens Hof is a Dutch student at Utrecht University.  She undertook her 7-month research with the same organisation I will be working with later this month (Jan 2020). So the case study and background Lauren’ wrote up is a gold mine for me.

It was also useful because it provides important nuanced sociological insights about the local context and gender norms that relate to mobility in Lunsar.

Lauren’s research centres on one of three Village Bicycle Project programs – the girls Learn how to ride program.

Her final paper is a very interesting read and she has crammed it full of compelling (and for my project useful) local perspicacity.

Laurens uses Social Constructions as her theoretical frame to explore critical areas of gender, mobility, gender norms for children, knowledge transfer and community perception.

Here overarching research objective was: to create a thick description of how people in and around Lunsar use bicycles and which meaning they attach to them, informed by both the accessibility of bikes to women and girls and the effect of programs that teach girls how to ride a bicycle.

Below are the research questions that guided Laurens’ work and her final abstract.

Research questions

Her three research questions were:

Question One: What are gender norms and expectations and social stigmas for boys’ and girls’ behavior in Lunsar, and what do these gendered norms convey about the mobility of boys and girls?

Question Two: Who uses bicycles, how bicycles are being used, what are the social requirements for bike usage, and how is the technology perceived by both users and nonusers?

Question Three: How does the VBP use the ‘Learn to Ride’ program to promote cycling for girls, what is the theoretic foundation of this project, what is the effect of the program on the social stigmas that girls experience and how is the outcome perceived in the Lunsar area?

VBP Girls’ Learn to Ride Program: Lunsar, Sierra Leone. Bicycles Create Change.com 7th Jan 2020
Image: Bikes of the World (Village Bicycle Project partner).

Lauren’s Abstract

Women and girls in sub Saharan African countries often face constraints and limitations on their mobility. Social stigmas and a lack of access to means of transport constrain their mobility.

In this research, headway is made into understanding the mobility of girls and women in Lunsar, as little is known about how in this region gender is perceived, as well as how those understandings of gender relate to the mobility of women. An overview is given of gender in the Lunsar society, and what the societal norms are for boys and girls. Specific attention is paid to the gender norms that relate to mobility.

One of the main findings is that girls’ mobility is constrained with a social stigma that girls who ride a bicycle will lose their virginity. The mobility of adult women is also constrained, a woman who rides a bicycle is deemed to be a prostitute.

These constraints that women and girls experience are not a uniform part of society, they are most regularly encountered in the neighboring villages, but not everyone holds to these beliefs.

In the second part of this research an analysis is made of how different groups within the Lunsar society understand and view bicycles. It shows that there are multiple interpretations possible, who are sometimes with each other in conflict. Bicycles are mainly seen as a tool for children to go to school, as well as a device to race and sport.

These dominating views drown out other potential views, such as the idea that a bicycle can be used for the transportation of goods.

Finally, the programs of the NGO Village Bicycle Project are reviewed and show the effect that teaching girls how to ride a bicycle has an effect on the exclusion of girls riding a bicycle.

It shows that teaching girls how to ride a bike increases the mobility of girls whose parents were already accepting of their daughter riding a bicycle, but that effect was not found on girls whose parents were not accepting of that.

Bike Works at Kunnanurra WA

Bike Works at Kunnanurra WA. Bicycles Create Change.com 7th Jan 2020
Image: Bikes 4 Life

This blog has looked at a number of programs that increase bike use, access and participation for indigenous Australians, such as:

In this post, we look at one of Bikes 4 Life programs that connects with local deadly youths living in a remote community to a range of other health services by improving bike participation.

Bikes 4 Life is an international non-government organisation that supplies bicycles all over the world to improve education access, health outcomes and income generation.

One of Bikes 4 Life’s programs operates in a remote Western Australia community in conjunction with the local organisation East Kimberley Job Pathways (EKJP).  

East Kimberley Job Pathways is located in the far north of Western Australia in the isolated community of Kunnunurra. EKJP is a ‘for purpose’ Aboriginal Corporation with the primary purpose of delivering the Australian Government’s Community Development Programme across the broader East Kimberley Region of Western Australia.

In 2019, the EKJP team ran a bike rescue program called BikeWorks. The Bike Works program underpins a social and emotional wellbeing program that EKJP runs for local youths. This program teaches youths how to refurbish and maintain donated bicycles sourced through Bikes 4 Life. Read more about the program here.

The bikes used for the program are all recreational bikes (no roadies) because more robust bikes are better suited to the remote Western Australian terrain and climate.

The Bike Works program outcomes are:

  • Increased social and emotional wellbeing
  • Teamwork and networks
  • Building new relationships
  • Improved attendance at school (and/or other education pathways)
  • Raised aspirations of future pathways
  • Connection and contribution to community
  • Employment opportunities (within the Bike Program and with other employers)

The program was very successful. After a great start in 2019, and with increasing demands for bikes in the community, Bikes 4 Life is will continue sending bikes and supporting EKJP so this program can keep progressing.

Bike Works at Kunnanurra WA. Bicycles Create Change.com 7th Jan 2020
Image: Bikes 4 Life

Parts of this post are sourced from Bikes 4 Life Projects web page.

Happy New Decade! 2020

Nina speculating what 2020 will be like. A big thanks to Mike Yang for this photo. Check out his work here.

Happy New Gear (Year) – and Happy New Decade!

Another amazing year to explore our local surrounds and beyond on two wheels!

Whatever you ride and however often you ride it – now is the time to reinvigorate you and your beloved bicycle!

How about this year, sharing your love of cycling beyond your normal routine and friendship group? This is easy to do – here’s a few quick and easy ways to kick of 2020 with a positive cycling spirit:

  • arrange a bicycle picnic event for friends with kids
  • go for a ride somewhere new (without a map)
  • make an effort to talk cyclists you have never met before
  • help someone who has not ridden in a while get back on the bike
  • undertake your own fundraising bike ride challenge
  • reduce your cycling gear and donate the rest to those in need
  • show a daughter how to change a bike tyre
  • pick up rubbish along your favourite bike routes
  • make some rides completely technology and device-free
  • throw some native seed bombs into vacant land as you ride past
  • spend a day helping out a bike charity
  • catch yourself saying ‘girls’ to women riders, just call them ‘cyclists’
  • when buying biking gear, question consumption, packaging and waste practices
Image: In The Know Cycling

2020 is also shaping up to be a big year internationally. Here are some key global events coming up in 2020.

There is so much going on this year!

So, whatever your plans are and wherever you are – happy new year!

I hope all your 2020 biking (and other) adventures are safe, fun and constructive.

Nina always ready for a quiet local ride. Image: Imagen Effect.

Thank you to all the readers and supporters of this blog.

2019 was a hectic year and it was lovely receiving emails of encouragement, projects to follow up on and suggestions for posts.

Thank you very much all! I appreciate it so much!

2020 will be big year for me.

This year I will be travelling to Africa for my PhD bicycle research fieldwork, revamping a new look for my flower bike Leki and initiating a few new community bike projects.

As always, I will be documenting all on this blog – so stay tuned!

I’m excited to continue sharing with you the many glorious ways in which bicycles create positive personal, community and environmental change!

Happy 2020 all!

Image: Cherry M