Exploring economic empowerment and gender issues in Lesotho’s Child Grants Programme: a qualitative study

Author:

Besnier Elodie12ORCID,Hlabana Thandie34,Kotzias Virginia1,Beck Kathryn15ORCID,Sieu Celine6,Muthengi Kimanzi6

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Global Health Inequalities Research (CHAIN), Department of Sociology and Political Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) , PO Box 8900, Torgarden, Trondheim 7491, Norway

2. Department of Public Health and Nursing, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, NTNU , PO Box 8900, Torgarden, Trondheim 7491, Norway

3. National University of Lesotho , P.O. Roma 180, Roma, Lesotho

4. School of Environmental Sciences, University of Hull , Cottingham Rd., Hull HU6 7RX, UK

5. Centre for Fertility and Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health , P.O. box 222, Skøyen, Oslo N-0213, Norway

6. UNICEF Lesotho Country Office , 13 UN Road, UN House, Maseru, Lesotho

Abstract

Abstract Cash transfers (CTs) have been increasingly used in low- and middle-income countries as a poverty reduction and social protection tool. Despite their potential for empowering vulnerable groups (especially women), the evidence for such outcomes remains unclear. Additionally, little is known about how this broad concept fits into and is perceived in such programmes. For example, Lesotho’s Child Grants Programme (CGP) is an unconditional CT targeting poor and vulnerable households with children. The CGP has been presented as one of the Lesotho’s flagship programmes in developing the country’s social safety net system. Using the CGP’s early phases as a case study, this research aims to capture how programme stakeholders understood and operationalized the concept of economic empowerment (especially women’s) in Lesotho’s CGP. The qualitative analysis relied on the triangulation of information from a review of programme documents and semi-structured key informant interviews with programme stakeholders. First, the programme documents were coded deductively, while the interview transcripts were coded inductively, and then both materials were analysed thematically. Finally, differences or disagreements within each theme were explored individually according to the programme’s chronology, the stakeholders’ affiliation and their role in the CGP. The complexity of economic empowerment was reflected in the diversity of definitions found in the desk review and interviews. Economic empowerment was primarily understood as improving access to economic resources and opportunities and, less so, as agency and social and economic inclusion. There were stronger disagreements on other definitions as they seemed to be a terminology primarily used by specific stakeholders. This diversity of definitions impacted how these concepts were integrated into the programme, with particular gaps between the strategic vision and operational units as well as between the role this concept was perceived to play and the effects evaluated so far.

Funder

NTNU Department of Sociology and Political Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy

Reference88 articles.

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