User:Favour Chidinma/Gender Inequality in Nigeria

Feminist movement in Nigeria
After the Aba women's riot in 1929, the Feminist Movement in Nigeria covertly and unintentionally got its start. Women are now clearly present in all walks of life in Nigeria as a result of the extraordinary increase that has been observed throughout time.Nigerian women practice a form of feminism that views men as complementing partners in progress rather than as rivals.

It is usually divided into three waves: the first wave, which dealt with voting rights and property rights; the second wave, which concentrated on equality and anti-discrimination; and the third wave, which began in the 1990s as a reaction to the second wave's alleged preference for white, straight women.

Examples of contemporary feminist movements in Nigeria.
Aside from the Me Too movement, there have been other powerful hashtag campaigns, including Female in Nigeria, which urged women to speak out about the difficult conditions that women in that nation faced, Bring Back Our Girls, a drive to find hundreds of girls who had been abducted by the terrorist organization Boko Haram, and most recently No More, an initiative started by Nigerian activist Ireti Bakare-Yusuf that aims to put an end to sexual abuse and impunity.