Women’s economic empowerment and collective action in agriculture: new evidence and measurement challenges

There are differing views among development policy makers and grassroots women on what constitutes women’s economic empowerment

Abstract

Development actors increasingly claim that their interventions are contributing to women’s economic empowerment, and donors require that monitoring and evaluation systems capture these empowerment outcomes. However, there are divergent views and perspectives among both development policy makers and among grassroots women themselves on what constitutes ‘women’s economic empowerment’. Differences relate to whether empowerment is seen as an end in itself, or a means to broader developmental goals; how broadly or narrowly economic the definition is; and whether empowerment is primarily seen as having the ability to ‘compete’ in the market, or encompasses the capacity to challenge structural inequalities in the market and beyond. Related to this, there is also considerable debate on what measures constitute rigorous or comparable evidence of economic empowerment, and whether it is even possible to ‘measure’ empowerment across different contexts.

Citation

Baden, S. Policy Brief No. 68. Women’s eonomic empowerment and collective action in agriculture: new evidence and measurement challenges. Future Agricultures Consortium, Brighton, UK (2014) 8 pp.

Policy Brief No. 68. Women’s economic empowerment and collective action in agriculture: new evidence and measurement challenges

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2014