Marjorie Mbilinyi
Born1943 (age 8081)
NationalityTanzanian
American
Citizenship Tanzania
Occupation(s)Academic
Lecturer
Organization(s)University of Dar-es-Salaam
TGNP
Known forGender Equality Activist
Spouse
(m. 1967)

Marjorie Mbiliniyi (born 1943) is a scholar, feminist and gender activist. She was born in New York and studied educational sciences before settling in Dar-es-Salaam and became a citizen of Tanzania after married a Tanzanian. She worked at the Department of Education at Dar-es-Salaam university. Mbiliniyi has dedicate herself to collaborate with and organize women to fight against patriarchy and neo-liberalism in Tanzania and beyond. She worked as a lecturer at the University of Dar es Salaam where she retired in 2003. After her retirement from academia, she served as the Principal Policy Analyst at the Tanzania Gender Networking Program; later known as TGNP Mtandao from 2004–2014.[1]

Personal life

She is married to Simon Mbilinyi, former minister and member of parliament who was the first chancellor of Open University of Tanzania.

Works

Marjorie Mbilinyi has published 21 books and reports authored or co-authored and/or edited, including:

  • Nyerere on Education (co-editor with Elieshi Lema, Rakesh Rajani; 2004)
  • Activist Voices: Feminist Struggles for an Alternative World (co-editor with Mary Rusimbi, Chachage S L Chachage and Demere Kitunga, 2003)
  • Against Neoliberalism: Gender, Democracy & Development (co-editor Chachage S L Chachage, 2003)
  • Food is Politics (with KIHACHA, 2002)
  • Gender Patterns in Micro and Small Enterprises of Tanzania (Editor, 2000); Gender Profile of Tanzania (editor, TGNP, 1993)
  • Reviving Local Self-Reliance (coeditor with Wilbert Gooneratne, 1992)
  • Big Slavery: Agribusiness and the Crisis in Women’s Employment in Tanzania (1991)
  • Women in Tanzania (co-authored with Ophelia Mascarenhas, 1983)

References

  1. Mbilinyi, Marjorie (2011). "Gender Struggles at the University of Dar es Salaam: A Personal Herstory". Tanzania Journal of Development Studies. 11 (1–2): 16.
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