This article examines Gender-Responsive Budgeting in African Public Finance: Progress and Persistent Gaps: Community-Based Perspectives with a focused emphasis on Niger within the field of Law. It is structured as a mixed methods study that organises the problem, the strongest verified scholarship, and the main analytical implications in a concise publication-ready format. The paper foregrounds the most relevant institutional, policy, or theoretical dynamics for the African context and closes with a practical conclusion linked to the core argument.
Abraham Kuol Nyuon (Fri,) studied this question.