Basirika, E., and P. Balagadde. 1997. Women's participation in politics, business and power positions in Uganda. A research paper commissioned by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, Kampala.
Berry, S. 1989. Social institutions and access to resources. Africa 1: 41-54.
Bujra, J. 1975. Women entrepreneurs of early Nairobi. Canadian Journal of African Studies 9, no. 2: 231.
Burgess, R. 1978. Petty commodity housing or dweller control? A critique of John Turner's views on housing policy. World Development 6, no. 9/10: 1105-1133.
Elliot, C. 1975. Patterns of poverty in the Third World. New York: Pergamon Press.
Evans, A. 1993. Ideology and power in new institutional economics: Reflections on contracts, markets and gender relations. School of African and Asian Studies, University of Sussex.
Granovetter, M. 1985. Economic action and social structure: The problem of embededness. American Journal of Sociology 91, no. 3:481-510.
Kwado, K. A. 1990. Home ownership in urban West Africa: A mirage of increasing proportions. Ekistics 342 (May/June): 205-213.
Larson, A. 1991. Women householders and housing strategies: The case of Gaborone, Botswana. The National Swedish Institute for Building Research.
Lee-Smith, D. 1995. Women's and men's rights to and control of land and property in Eastern Africa. A paper presented at the seminar on gendered power relations in housing, October, Lund, Sweden.
Macaloo, G. 1990. Insecurity of tenure and housing development in Kenya. Appropriate Technology 21, no. 2:21-22.
______. 1994. The changing nature of financing low-income urban housing development in Kenya. Housing Studies 9, no. 2:281-299.
Manyire, H. 1993. Gender constructs in agricultural markets: The case for Kicwamba Sub-county, Kasese District. MA thesis, Makerere University.
Ntege, H. 1992. Women in the urban housing crisis: The impact of public policies and practices on women's housing in Kampala, Uganda. MA thesis, Institute of Social Studies, The Hague.
Obbo, C. 1976. Dominant male ideology and female options: Three East African case studies. Africa 46, no. 4:371-388.
______. 1984. African women: Their struggle for economic independence. London: Zed Press.
O'Connor, A. 1983. The African city. London: Hutchinson.
Peil, M. 1976. African squatter settlements: A comparative study. Urban Studies 13, no. 2:155-166.
Razavi, S., and C. Miller. 1995. From WID to GAD: Conceptual shifts in the
women and development discourse. Occasional Paper, no. 1. Geneva: UNRISD.
Republic of Uganda. 1992a. A national shelter strategy for Uganda. Vol. 1. Kampala: Department of Housing, Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development.
______. 1992b. The 1991 Uganda population and housing census: Final results. Entebbe: Government Printers.
Rondinelli, D. 1990. Housing the urban poor in developing countries: The
magnitude of housing deficiencies and the failure of conventional strategies are world-wide problems. American Journal of Economics and Sociology 49, no. 2: 153-166.
Ruttan, V., and Y. Hayami. 1984. Towards a theory of induced institutional innovation. Journal of Development Studies 20, no. 4: 203-223.
Sanders, T. 1983. Promoting social development: Private sector initiatives
in Cali, Columbia. UFSI Reports, no. 21. Hanover, N. H. University Field Staff International.
Schuller, M. Ed. 1990. Women, law and development in Africa WILDAF: Origin and issues. Washington, D.C.: OEF International.
Sengendo, H. 1992. The growth of low quality housing in Kampala, Uganda, between 1972-1989. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Nottingham.
Van Arkadie, B. 1989. The role of institutions in development. Proceedings of the World Bank annual conference on development economics. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.
World Bank. 1993. Uganda: Growing out of poverty. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.