Helpdesk Research Report: Women’s Economic Empowerment in the Pacific

phd thesis on women's economic empowerment

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This review looks at major trends in spending (comparing women and men), the chief barriers to women having more income and control of their finances, and the key opportunities for programs to address economic empowerment of women at household and community levels.

Much of the available evidence on women’s economic situation in the Pacific comes from household income and expenditure surveys, which do not usually disaggregate on the grounds of gender. While there are some data about women’s income, most analysis of expenditure is conducted at the household level and it is therefore difficult to examine trends in women and men’s spending.

Compared with other parts of the world, women in the Pacific region experience limited economic empowerment. In most Pacific countries, women tend to be under-represented in the formal workforce, spend more time doing household work, and are paid less than men. Female-headed households are twice as likely to be in poverty than male-headed households.

Key barriers to women’s economic empowerment include poor educational attainment, patriarchal norms, customary law and a lack of land/property rights, a lack of access to finance, a lack of skills and knowledge, and poor infrastructure.

Few studies have examined which economic empowerment strategies offer the best opportunities for success in Pacific countries. Two studies advocate supporting female financial literacy training as a means to improving the efficacy of female-targeted microfinance strategies. The broader literature on women’s economic empowerment emphasises the importance of tackling multiple constraints when designing women’s economic empowerment programs.

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Phd THESIS PROPOSAL

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Ibukunoluwa Sode

phd thesis on women's economic empowerment

Childhood, adolescence and early adulthood remain for many girls and young women a period of deprivation, danger and vulnerability, resulting in a significant lack of agency and critical development deficits. In many cases, overlapping and intersecting experiences of deprivation, foregone human development opportunities and abuse or exploitation serve to perpetuate and intensify poverty for girls and women over the life-course. Girls’ vulnerabilities in relation to poverty dynamics are different to those of boys and to those of adult women. This is in part because of their relative powerlessness and the particularities of their life stage. What happens at this critical time in their lives can reinforce their poverty status and that of their offspring, or influence their movement into or out of poverty. Poverty research has historically focused on material manifestations of poverty (measured by income and basic human development indicators such as educational enrolment and nutritional status). However, the role that social risks and vulnerabilities play in perpetuating chronic poverty and propelling people into poverty has gained recognition over the past decade. Accordingly, in this report we focus on social institutions – the collection of formal and informal laws, norms and practices that have an effect on human capabilities by either limiting or enabling individual and collective agency. These social institutions, we suggest, have far greater influence on developmental outcomes than is generally appreciated. Social institutions are part of the wider culture that informs multiple aspects of our behaviour and our societies. They play a key role in determining girls’ and young women’s life opportunities and capabilities, by either limiting or enabling individual and collective agency. Social institutions are not inherently good or bad, but when they result in processes that lead to inequality, discrimination and exclusion, they generate a myriad of development deficits and physical and psychological trauma. These barriers to human development can lead to and perpetuate chronic poverty and vulnerability over the course of childhood and adulthood, and potentially inter-generationally. In this report, we identify five critical social institutions, broadening and modifying the Social Institutions and Gender Index of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Within this set of institutions, we pay particular attention to how gender intertwines with other forces of exclusion (class, caste, ethnicity, urban/rural locality, disability, etc). We also highlight the importance of local context, which matters both in the analysis of constraints and in the identification of solutions. Our key modifications to the SIGI are as follows: first, we extend the SIGI range to cover girls rather than just women. Second, we consider a broader definition of well-being beyond the economic, one which captures a range of capabilities and outcomes as well as the complexities of supporting girls and women to both avoid and exit chronic poverty. Third, we give our own labels to the institutions, and also modify some of the component variables, in order to better capture the range of norms and practices that underpin them. Below is a brief overview of each of the characteristics of the five institutions we cover.

Lana Khattab

How does one measure something that is so central to peacebuilding as gender, but that often proves to be so elusive to efforts to quantify it beyond counting numbers of women and men? How can we better understand our impacts on conflict-affected societies and improve our peacebuilding practices by comprehensively taking gendered identities, dynamics and norms into account? This report aims to help peacebuilders to better capture the impact of integrating gender into peacebuilding projects. It is based on a review of existing design, monitoring and evaluation tools and approaches to examining gender in a peacebuilding context, discussions with practitioners and academia, as well as case studies. The main objective of our project is to help identify innovative, comprehensive and realistic ways of measuring the interplay of peacebuilding projects and gender relations. We do not present one overarching gender indicator or one ‘measuring gender’ method that would be applicable in all cases, as this is an impossibility. Rather, we will examine different tools for measuring different kinds of gendered impacts of peacebuilding efforts on beneficiary individuals and communities.

Ginette Azcona

This volume of Progress of the World’s Women starts with a paradox: the past century has seen a transformation in women’s legal rights, with countries in every region expanding the scope of women’s legal entitlements. Nevertheless, for most of the world’s women the laws that exist on paper do not always translate into equality and justice. In many contexts, in rich and poor countries alike, the infrastructure of justice – the police, the courts and the judiciary – is failing women, which manifests itself in poor services and hostile attitudes from the very people whose duty it is to fulfil women’s rights.

Patty Chang

The new global Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) Index introduced in this report bridges insights from gender and development indices with those from peace and security indices. The index incorporates three basic dimensions of well- being—inclusion (economic, social, political); justice (formal laws and informal discrimination); and security (at the family, community, and societal levels)—and captures and quantifies them through 11 indicators. It ranks 153 countries—covering more than 98 percent of the world’s population—along these three dimensions in a way that focuses attention on key achievements and major shortcomings. It reflects a shared vision that countries are more peaceful and prosperous when women are accorded full and equal rights and opportunity. A primary goal of the index is to accelerate progress on both the international Women, Peace and Security agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals, bringing partners together around an agenda for women’s inclusion, justice, and security. It offers opportunities for stakeholders to review and discuss challenges and to identify opportunities for trans- formative change. It highlights key priorities, points toward a roadmap of needed reforms, and can inform more effective partnerships and collaboration.

Laura Turquet

Progress of the World's Women is UN Women's flagship report. It tracks progress on gender equality around the world, with each edition focusing on a particular theme. The 2011-2012 report is about women's access to justice, with chapters on legal frameworks, the justice chain, legal pluralism, and justice for women during and after conflict. It also includes a section on tracking the MDGs from a gender perspective; and statistical annexes, including original global data on laws on violence against women.

Safer Sooner Report

Elizabeth Blackney , Eleanor Ann Nwadinobi , Eliza Johnson

The Every Woman Coalition reached the consensus that a stand alone treaty to end, and prevent, violence against women and girls is the best, next step. Level the law: the patchwork of protection afforded women and girls leaves the vast majority without an opportunity to pursue justice through the courts. Dozens of studies point to the legal, geographic, and enforcement gaps that continue to isolate victims and survivors of violence. Decades of research by civil society, governments, and international entities, demonstrates that a whole-of-society, whole-of-government approach lowers rates of violence. An analysis of global violence estimates that violence against women costs the global economy US$4.7 trillion per year, or 5.5 percent of the global Gross Domestic Product. Survivors need a treaty that centers them and provides the global binding norm necessary to adjudicate their cases. The stand-alone treaty our coalition supports will prioritize closing the Normative and Geographic Gaps in International Law. The stand-alone treaty our coalition supports will be a Globally Applicable Instrument. The stand-alone treaty our coalition supports will close the Enforcement Gap with an innovative narrative + metrics-based approach. The stand-alone treaty our coalition supports will catalyze funding, just as the Landmine Treaty did in 1997. The stand-alone treaty our coalition supports will accelerate the fulfillment of Sustainable Development Goal Number 5. Violence against women is a human rights violation, a public health emergency, and an economic crisis.

Browne, E., Haider, H., Oddsdottir, F., Rohwerder, B., & Strachan, A. L. (2014). Gender in fragile and conflict-affected situations (Rapid Literature Review). Birmingham, UK: GSDRC, University of Birmingham.

Brigitte Rohwerder , Evie Browne , Anna Louise Strachan

This rapid literature review, in annotated bibliography format, provides a bibliography of some of the most recent literature published in 2013 and 2014 (up to April 2014) on the topic of gender in fragile and conflict-affected situations. It includes all types of available written material, including peer-reviewed articles, impact evaluations, policy papers, NGO position papers, toolkits, and UN documents. The report is broken down into seven thematic sections: - gender and justice; - women’s leadership and political participation; - women’s access to economic empowerment and opportunities; - combatting sexual and gender based violence; - women, peace and security; - responsiveness of plans and budgets to gender equality; - gender equality and women’s empowerment.

Gender in Fragile and Conflict-affected Situations: Literature Review

Freyja Oddsdóttir

This rapid review collates a large amount of literature published in 2013 and 2014 (up to April 2014) on the topic of gender in fragile and conflict-affected situations (FCAS). It is not a systematic or exhaustive review, but does provide a comprehensive overview of the literature available. It includes all types of available written material, including peer-reviewed articles, impact evaluations, policy papers, NGO position papers, toolkits, and UN documents. The report is broken down into seven thematic sections requested by the European Commission: • gender and justice; • women’s leadership and political participation; • women’s access to economic empowerment and opportunities; • combatting sexual and gender based violence; • women, peace and security; • responsiveness of plans and budgets to gender equality; • gender equality and women’s empowerment. The first section (Global) collates articles under these headings, and reflects global or broad literature which looks at these issues from a wide perspective. The second section (Regional) collates articles which look at specific country case studies, grouped by world region. Within these sections, literature is also grouped under the seven thematic headings to enable quick reference to these topics. The literature refers to any situations of conflict or disaster within a country, not necessarily only in countries identified as fragile states. The report focuses on some specific countries of interest identified by the EC: Bolivia, Chad, Colombia, DR of Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Georgia, Haiti, India, Ivory Coast, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Mali, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Thailand, West Bank and Gaza, and Zimbabwe.

Becky Mitchell

There is still a considerable lack of systematic and rigorous understanding about the impact of violent conflict on women‘s roles, activities and aspirations, or about the nature and magnitude of the benefits of including women more fully in economic recovery and peace-building processes. Patricia Justino, Ivan Cardona, Catherine Muller and Becky Mitchell Policy programming around gender issues in post-conflict contexts is currently being designed based on limited rigorous evidence, and incorporates inadequate procedures to evaluate its impact in terms of gender roles and gender equality. This situation has at times resulted in misplaced interventions and the continued emphasis on the reintegration of (male) combatants, and male employment generation programmes. The main aim of this report is to analyse how changes in the roles and activities of women during episodes of violent conflict may shape their contribution to post-conflict economic recovery and sustainable peace. The report poses two important questions for which limited evidence is to date available in the academic literature on violent conflict or in policy programming in post-conflict contexts: 1) How does violent conflict change the roles that women take on within their households and communities? 2) How do changes in female roles during conflict affect women‘s own status after the conflict, and the capacity of households and communities to recover from the conflict?

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COMMENTS

  1. (PDF) An Empirical Study of Women's Economic Empowerment and

    While studying it found that 14.5% women's get respect from family and society. While only 10.75% women were involved in buying/selling of land/house and less than 20% women were involved in ...

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  3. PDF LILES, HEIDI H. M.A.. Women's Empowerment: Defining and

    LILES, HEIDI H. M.A.. Women's Empowerment: Defining and Operationalizing a Critical Variable. (2021) Directed by Dr. Steve Kroll-Smith. 67 pp. The purpose of this study is to shed light on how development experts and organizations. define and operationalize the term "women's empowerment.". Utilizing primarily qualitative.

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    3.2 Women's economic empowerment composite score. The extent of WEE in sub-Saharan Africa is low, but with considerable variation in the distribution. Out of a possible WEE score of 9, the average for all countries was 3.0. South Africa scored highest at 4.1, and Niger the lowest at 1.5 (Figure 2).

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    empowering women, using a nationally representative survey from Vietnam. The ultimate goal is to gain better understanding of the effect of microcredit on women's empowerment in developing countries. Overall, I find weak evidence that microcredit improves families' well-being, especially women's well-being.

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    women and to reduce poverty. This thesis looks at one version of informal savings groups, Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs), and its impact on women's economic empowerment in Likuyani sub-county, Kenya. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 24 women from five different groups during October and November 2016. The groups

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