Gender-transformative action, social norms and economic empowerment

Author:

Cookson Tara Patricia1ORCID,Carlitz Ruth2ORCID,Berryhill Alex3,Fuentes Lorena4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of British Columbia, Canada

2. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. CARE USA, USA

4. Ladysmith, USA

Abstract

Feminist advocacy for ‘gender transformative’ approaches to development, public policy and humanitarian action that account for social norms has surged in recent years. This article intervenes in the debate around norms and implications for transformative approaches. We draw on a unique set of quantitative, global ‘gender data’ collected in 2020 and 2021 and examine how social norms inform women’s experiences of economic empowerment, as well as how these relationships map onto the current debates around interventions to address social norms and the form these interventions ought to take. Our data show that social norms matter for access to and control over resources; in addition, they illustrate that an individual belief in gender equality is fairly common around the world but that such individual beliefs frequently do not coincide with what people think their neighbours believe. These findings suggest a need for consideration of factors beyond individual attitudes towards and beliefs in gender-transformative interventions for women’s economic empowerment.

Publisher

Bristol University Press

Reference50 articles.

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2. Norms in the Wild: How to Diagnose, Measure, and Change Social Norms;Bicchieri, C.,2017

3. Marketing social norms: social marketing and the ‘social norms approach’;Burchell, K.,2013

4. Gender matters in economic empowerment interventions: a research review;Buvinić, M.,2019

5. Crisis, care and transformation: a conversation with Diane Elson;Chhachhi, A.,2022

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