Cows and Currency: How Bride-price Rips the Fabric of Global Feminism.
The high-stakes marriage competitions recently publicised on social media, where men, often from the diaspora, bid staggering sums of cattle and cash for a bride, have thrown a spotlight on the practice of bride-wealth.
The spectacle of men vying with bids of over 200 cattle and tens of thousands of dollars in South Sudan provides a visceral example of the debate.
Beyond the spectacle, this practice is the fault line of a deep ideological divide. Within the global women’s movement, feminists are forced to ask: Is bride-wealth a form of patriarchal commodification, or a site of cultural agency?
Commodification and control
For many feminists, particularly those focused on universal rights and bodily autonomy, the transactional nature of bride-wealth is indistinguishable from the sale of a woman.
They argue that the exchange of goods and money for a bride fundamentally undermines her human dignity and reinforces male ownership.
“This may be viewed to impede gender equality and contribute to a culture in which women are viewed as property. In Women’s Lives and Family Relationships study, conducted in 2011, 53% of women in Vanuatu stated that they believe a woman becomes a man’s property if a bride price is paid,” asserts UN Women in reports regarding the practice.
This perspective views the dramatic increase in costs, “bride-wealth inflation”, often driven by cash from the diaspora, as proof that the custom has devolved from a symbol of alliance between families to a high-stakes commercial transaction.
The radical critique strongly links inflated bride-wealth to negative social consequences, chiefly child and forced marriage (where poor families are pressured to marry off daughters early for financial gain) and domestic violence.
Liberal defence
On the other side of the schism are those, often African scholars and activists, who caution against a simplistic, Western-centric reading of complex social systems. This liberal feminist view argues that focusing only on the “price” ignores the sophisticated cultural and social value inherent in the exchange.
They contend that, in its original form, bride-wealth is not payment to the woman’s father, but rather a form of reciprocity and alliance building between two kinship groups, providing the woman with dignity and security within her new family.
“The other claim is that the primary function of bride wealth is the legitimation of marriage and that by legitimating marriage bride wealth functions to enhance, not to diminish the status of African women.” A 2025 publication suggests.
Furthermore, modern analysis highlights the agency of the woman herself. The competition over her hand can be viewed as an acknowledgement of her high standing, education, and beauty: a form of status that the woman, in some cases, can leverage.
Calls for reform
The divide is rarely absolute. Many practitioners, such as the non-profit ChildBride Solidarity (CBS) in South Sudan, occupy a difficult middle ground, acknowledging the cultural value while confronting the destructive modern realities.
Their efforts are focused on reform, not on abolition. The effort is to protect the cultural integrity of the ritual while eliminating its harmful modern outcomes.
The most widely advocated reform is the establishment of community-led caps on the value of bride-wealth. This aims to strip the practice of its commercial edge while retaining its cultural significance.
This movement suggests that the future of bride-wealth lies not in an ideological battle for abolition or total acceptance, but in a community-driven consensus that prioritises a woman’s consent and education over the size of her family’s dowry.