<Ul> <Li> Male granary: storage place for pearl millet and other grains . Building with a pointed roof . This building is well protected from mice . The amount of filled male granaries is an indication for the size and the richness of a guinna . </Li> <Li> Female granary: storage place for a woman's things, her husband has no access . Building with a pointed roof . It looks like a male granary but is less protected against mice . Here, she stores her personal belongings such as clothes, jewelry, money and some food . A woman has a degree of economic independence, and earnings and things related to her merchandise are stored in her personal granary . She can for example make cotton or pottery . The number of female granaries is an indication for the number of women living in the guinna . </Li> <Li> Tógu nà (a kind of case à palabres): a building only for men . They rest here much of the day throughout the heat of the dry season, discuss affairs and take important decisions in the toguna . The roof of a toguna is made by 8 layers of millet stalks . It is a low building in which one cannot stand upright . This helps with avoiding violence when discussions get heated . </Li> <Li> Punulu (a house for menstruating women): this house is on the outside of the village . It is constructed by women and is of lower quality than the other village buildings . Women having their period are considered to be unclean and have to leave their family house to live during five days in this house . They use kitchen equipment only to be used here . They bring with them their youngest children . This house is a gathering place for women during the evening . This hut is also thought to have some sort of reproductive symbolism due to the fact that the hut can be easily seen by the men who are working the fields who know that only women who are on their period, and thus not pregnant, can be there . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Male granary: storage place for pearl millet and other grains . Building with a pointed roof . This building is well protected from mice . The amount of filled male granaries is an indication for the size and the richness of a guinna . </Li> <Li> Female granary: storage place for a woman's things, her husband has no access . Building with a pointed roof . It looks like a male granary but is less protected against mice . Here, she stores her personal belongings such as clothes, jewelry, money and some food . A woman has a degree of economic independence, and earnings and things related to her merchandise are stored in her personal granary . She can for example make cotton or pottery . The number of female granaries is an indication for the number of women living in the guinna . </Li> <Li> Tógu nà (a kind of case à palabres): a building only for men . They rest here much of the day throughout the heat of the dry season, discuss affairs and take important decisions in the toguna . The roof of a toguna is made by 8 layers of millet stalks . It is a low building in which one cannot stand upright . This helps with avoiding violence when discussions get heated . </Li>

Who made the decisions in a family based community in west africa