voice and agency: empowering women and girls for shared prosperity

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Voic e Agency and Empowering women and girls for shared prosperity

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Despite recent advances in important aspects of the lives of girls and women, pervasive challenges remain, frequently as a result of widespread deprivations and constraints. These often violate women’s most basic rights and are magnified and multiplied by poverty and lack of education. Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity distills vast data and hundreds of studies to shed new light on such constraints facing women and girls worldwide, from epidemic levels of gender-based violence to biased laws and norms that prevent them from owning property, working, and making decisions about their own lives. Building on the landmark 2012 World Development Report, it focuses on several areas key to women’s empowerment: freedom from violence, control over sexual and reproductive health and rights, ownership and control of land and housing, and voice and collective action. It explores the power of social norms in dictating how men and women can and cannot behave—deterring women from owning property or working even where laws permit, for example, because those who do become outcasts. The report argues that policymakers and stakeholders need to tackle this agenda, drawing on evidence about what works and systematically tracking progress: This must start with reforming discriminatory laws and follow through with concerted policies and public actions, including multi-sectoral approaches that engage men and boys and challenge adverse social norms. Expanding opportunities and amplifying the voices of women and girls isn’t a zero-sum equation because gender equality conveys broad development dividends for men and boys, families, and communities. Conversely, constraining women’s agency by limiting what jobs they can do or condoning gender-based violence can severely hinder efforts to end poverty and boost inclusive growth. Finally, the report argues that more and better data are needed to measure progress and hold governments and development agencies to account. Download free PDF: http://wrld.bg/CNQwn

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Page 1: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

VoiceAgencyandEmpowering women and girls for sharedprosperity

Page 2: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Able to make decisions about one's own life and act upon them to achieve desired outcomes, free of violence, retribution, or fear

Able to speak up and be heard, and to shape and share in discussions, discourse and decisions

Why voice and agency?

Agency

Voice

“An empowered woman is one who can help herself and others, who has a job, knows about herself and her environment and her

community. If you join societies, organizations, communities, and other social things, even spiritually, you will be empowered.”

— A participant from a focus group in Ghana (Tsikata and Darkwah, 2011)

Page 3: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Table of Contents

1. Framing the Challenge: Norms, Constraints & Deprivations

2. Enhancing Women’s Agency: A Cross-Cutting Agenda

3. Freedom from Violence4. Control over Sexual and Reproductive

Health and Rights5. Control over Land and Housing6. Amplifying Voices7. Closing Gaps in Data and Evidence

Page 4: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

More than 700 million women subject to violence at the hands of a husband, boyfriend or partner in their lifetime

Source: Preliminary analysis of WHO (World Health Organization), global prevalence database (2013) using World Bank regions.

Page 5: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Beyond the human tragedy, violence incurs major economic costs

Often at least what the country spends on primary education

Source: Duvvury et al., 2013

Page 6: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Women often face many deprivations and harmful norms

Source: Voice and Agency 2014 team estimates based on DHS for 54 countries using latest available data from 2001-2012.

Percentage of women

Page 7: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Extensive deprivations in Niger

Source: Voice and Agency 2014 team estimates based on DHS for 54 countries using latest available data from 2001-2012.

Percentage of women

Page 8: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Education is critical in overcoming deprivations

Suffer three deprivations

Suffer at least one deprivation

Secondary education and

higher Primary

education or less

Share with deprivations

Source: Voice and Agency 2014 team estimates based on DHS for 54 countries using latest available data from 2001-2012.

Primary education or

less

Secondary education

and higher

Page 9: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Education is important for sexual autonomy…

Source: Voice and Agency 2014 team estimates based on DHS using latest available data from 2001-2012.

Page 10: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

…And reduces the likelihood of early marriage

Girls who finish high school are six times less likely to marry early

Child marriage prevalence in 111 countries

Page 11: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

But, fewer women than men report

owning housing…

Control over land and housing can expand women’s agency

…or land

Page 12: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Women’s voices can be transformative

Collective action

Political participatio

n and decision making

Information and

communication

technologies

Page 13: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

But attitudes are restrictive

Sources: Voice and Agency 2014 team estimates for 87 countries based on World Values Survey data, latest years available (1996-2012); Inter-Parliamentary Union, 2013.

The belief that women make equally good leaders is correlated with female representation in parliaments

Page 14: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Middle

East

and N

orth A

frica

South

Asia

Sub-S

ahara

n Afric

a

East

Asia an

d the

Pacifi

c

Latin

America

and t

he Cari

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Easte

rn Eu

rope a

nd Cen

tral A

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1960/Initial 2010

Aver

age

no. o

f co

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ints

Uneven progress in addressing legal disparities

Note: Number of potential constraints equals 11

Changes in average number of legal constraints by region

Hallward-Driemeier, Hasan and Iqbal, 2013 Women’s Legal Rights Over 50 Years

Page 15: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

The need for legal reform remains

Number of countriesSource: Women, Business and the Law

2014

At least one legal difference

between men & women

No laws on domestic violence

Unequal inheritance

rights

Restrictions on women as head

of household

31

29

28

128

Page 16: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Number of countries with legislation against domestic violence

1 2 3 4 813

19 23 27 28 3035 37 41

4754 56

61 63 67 69 72 7476

Momentum for change: the case of domestic violence

Source: World Bank, Women, Business and the Law 2014: Removing Restrictions to Enhance Gender Equality

Page 17: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Promising directions for changing social norms

Access to

justice

Social protect

ion Engaging men, boys,

families, communi

ties Education

Economic opportuni

ties

Media

Page 18: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Gender-Based Violence: What works?Prevention

• Include men AND women

• Engage entire community

• Combine multiple approaches

• Last at least 6 months

• Address social norms around the acceptability of violence

Source: D. Arango, M. Morton, F. Gennari, S. Kiplesund and Mary E. forthcoming. Interventions to Prevent and Reduce Violence Against Women and Girls: A Systematic Review of Reviews. Background paper to the report on Women’s Voice and

Agency. Washington, DC: World Bank. Forthcoming, the Lancet.

Response

• Target survivors rather than perpetrators

• Encourage women’s autonomy and empowerment

• Include psychosocial elements (e.g. counseling) and victim advocacy

Page 19: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Programs enhancing agency

TOSTANWorking

with communi

ties to eliminate FGC

and child marriage

SASA!Mobilizin

g communi

ties to reduce

domestic violence

PROGRAM P

Promoting men’s roles as gender-equitabl

e caregive

rs

Page 20: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

“Data not only measures progress. It inspires it.”

-Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

Evidence on Data and Gender Equality (EDGE) Data 2X

Internationally agreed core indicators (52)

Internationally agreed indicators on violence against women

Selected New EffortsGaps

GBV: Scarce, infrequent and often underestimated

Access to land: Data not collected at individual

level

Sexual & reproductive health: Scarce

Voice: Limited

Page 21: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

World Bank Live Event9,143 page views to date, 4,597 live blog views, 70 online questions submitted

Top 10 Countries: US, UK, Canada, India, Australia, Mexico, South Africa, Germany, Japan, France

Media reception to the report

600+ tweets featuring #WomenCan have captured 10+ Million impressions to date.

On May 14, #WomenCan was the #7 trending Twitter topic in the United States***

and the #2 trending Twitter topic in Washington, D.C.

***A World Bank first

Original “postcards”

posted on the World Bank’s

Facebook channel.

Page 22: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

Over 400 news stories in more than 20 countries covered -- US, Canada, Pakistan, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, China, Malaysia,

South Africa, Nigeria, Uganda, Turkey, Morocco, Syria, Bahrain, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, and Algeria.

Educating Girls: Big Payoff For $45 A Year

May 15, 201411:37 AM ET - NPR Tell Me MoreGirls without an education are six times more likely to marry young than those who've finished high school, according to a new report from the World Bank Group. Guest host Celeste Headlee learns more.

World Bank: 700 million women subject to conjugal violence

Child brides face increased chances of illiteracy, domestic violence, report says

Page 23: Voice and Agency: Empowering Women and Girls for Shared Prosperity

#WomenCan

VoiceAgencyand