By Sibel Kusimba based on her IMTFI-funded research
In Kenya the use of mobile money sending systems has
become a part of daily life. In 2012 my
research team and I used semi-structured interviews to collect information on
the connections forged by sending and receiving mobile money. From this information we created social
network maps which reveal the paths of mobile money that circulate in families
and show the connections of love, reciprocity, and obligation among
members.
The social network maps show that women have various
positions of advantage – what sociologist Pierre
Bourdieu called social capital. Women
often have many connections, sending and receiving money from siblings,
children and grandchildren this helps make matrilineal kinship ties important in
social network graphs. Finally, women
are often brokers – connecting groups or “cliques” of others who would not otherwise be connected.
Figure 1 shows
mobile money flows among a family living in the rural hamlet of Naitiri,
Nairobi, and Chicago. The two main
groups in Figure 1 are the children of a pair of sisters. A 67-year old farmer I will call Ruth (red
circle) receives remittances from many of her eight children and 44
grandchildren, in turn circulating them back to her children but also brokering
these resources with her deceased sister’s oldest daughter (green circle), who
in turn sends and receives remittances with her siblings (also in green) and
their children (in yellow). Ruth’s network also receives international
remittances from the United States from one son and one daughter (light blue).
Figure 1 |
Writing in the July
2013 issue of American Anthropologist, Matthew Peeples and W. Randall Haas review theories of
brokerage. The “individualist” model associated with Burt’s classic study assumes brokerage is a position of
advantage that implies control over flows from one group to another. |The alternative
“collectivist” theory argues that brokerage can be an ambivalent, risky or
disadvantageous position and this can be more appropriate in settings where group or collective interests are valued more highly than those of individuals. Where the interests of the group in general
are more valued, individuals will in fact use their broker position to close
the “structural hole” and create more ties. These cultural settings may value collective interests- the trust or
frequent contact allowed by the dense network- above those of individuals.
There may be
aspects of both individualist and collectivist approaches to brokerage in
Kenyan women’s use of mobile money services. In another example, Sister Lucida is a 47-year old nun and student in
Chicago who sends about $300.00 a month to her mother in Homa Bay County,
Western Kenya. Sister Lucida is too busy
to hear and assess numerous requests for school fees and business investments
from her relatives and allows her mother, a widow, to use the money she sends
as she sees fit to help the family. After her father died, Sister Lucida
explained that her mother became vulnerable among her in-laws, who chased her
away from her home and stole her dishes and home furnishings. Sister Lucida and her siblings built and
furnished her a new home on land they purchased that is the envy of the village. Sister Lucida sends her money for “upkeep,”
and is aware that the money ends up helping others in the family as her mother
sees fit. Both she and her mother enjoy her status as a mother of a child in
America.
As a broker, the
Naitiri grandmother Ruth has used her influence in the family to fill the
structural hole and further the connections between her children and her
sister’s children. The children of Ruth
and her deceased sister have created a family association to collect school
fees for the children and grandchildren of this pair of sisters. At the
deceased sister’s funeral (often a time when social groups and generations
reconstitute themselves, and when discord is displayed and assuaged), the
children of these two women, who live in Naitiri, Kimilili, Chicago, and
Nairobi, discussed the high cost of education. They then formed a credit and
savings group in which each of them agreed to contribute 1000 shillings a month
to a common savings account from which school fees would be paid on a rotating
basis. The members meet once a month for a meal, where they also contribute
1000 Ksh. each towards a banked fund for school fees. Mobile money services are
used by some at the meeting to send mobile money to the treasurer - from
Chicago, a daughter uses Western Union.
In many families, siblings
and other close relatives use mobile money to contribute regularly to informal
savings or insurance plans in anticipation of funerals, weddings, medical care
and educational fees. Matrilineal flows
of mobile money often give mothers and grandmothers the potential to be
brokers; but often women use these positions to recirculate funds, and create
new, close connections of benefit to the group as a whole.
Dense networks may
also reflect the limited social prestige and authority of mothers and grandmothers
who, on maps of mobile money, are so central in collecting remittances. Several months after my field research in the
summer of 2012, Ruth was hospitalized with typhoid. Her son in Chicago told me that her children in
Kenya had been unable to raise the 40,000 Kenya shillings (about $600.00)
necessary for her release. Ruth
continued to accumulate a bill for two weeks after her treatment while she
waited to be let go from the hospital; her son and daughter in Chicago had
refused to pay the bill, arguing that the large number of siblings in Kenya
should raise the money by contributing amongst themselves. As the impasse continued, Ruth called her
oldest son in Nairobi, and during their heated conversation she told him that
the family’s economic security was in large part a result of the remittances
from America. He responded by telling
her to henceforth inform her Chicago children of her needs. After another week, her Chicago daughter sent
the money, and contact between the siblings was discontinued for several weeks
as hard feelings were nursed.
Dense networks of
mobile money result from strategies that value reciprocity, communication and
trust. Reciprocity and closure are the
most valued forms of social capital in the mobile money networks of Kenyans,
and these often leave individuals, even brokers, unable to accumulate the
resources they need. A request cannot be
denied; instead one’s phone must be shut off or “lost” to avoid pressure for
remittances. In a working paper for
IMTFI, we examined how gender is reflected in mobile money networks in
matrilineal ties, in the centrality of mothers and grandmothers, in the strong
patterns of reciprocity that make receivers also senders, and in polygynous
families where money is from those with resources to those without: from men to
women. Gendered flows of mobile money provide
a safety net and reduce risk, but often the resources sent are not enough, or
cannot be held on to long enough, to prevent a mother from languishing in the
hospital while her children squabble over the bill. Mobile money may simply provide a new
technological means through which women cope in societies where they are
marginalized from resources and wealth: by relying on their children, siblings,
and others in their social network for the emergencies and needs of daily
life.
Read Sibel Kusimba's full working paper, "Social Networks of Mobile Money in Kenya".
Read Sibel Kusimba's full working paper, "Social Networks of Mobile Money in Kenya".
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