Gender mainstreaming in rural road construction/usage in Ethiopia: impact and implications

Author:

Abhishek Abraham1,Borgia Cecilia2,Manjur Kebede3,van Steenbergen Frank4,Vera Letty Fajardo5

Affiliation:

1. Programme Manager, MetaMeta, Wageningen, the Netherlands (corresponding author: )

2. Independent consultant, Milan, Italy

3. Assistant Professor, Mekelle University, Mekelle, Ethiopia

4. Director, MetaMeta, Wageningen, the Netherlands

5. Associate, MetaMeta, Wageningen, the Netherlands

Abstract

This study investigated the engagement of men, women spouses (WS) and women heads-of-household (WHH) in the planning and construction of rural roads in two Ethiopian districts of Tigray and Amhara, and the differential impacts of rural roads on the mobility and transport of men, WS and WHH. The fieldwork established that there is a strong demand among women for both road use and employment opportunities in road construction. Compared with men, women demonstrated specific priorities with respect to rural road development, such as access to ambulance services, flat, wide and levelled roads, and improved access to means of transport. Although women's concerns have been slowly but steadily pushed up the planning agenda, there are gaps between gender provision in rural road development and implementation. The benefits of roads for women can be enhanced by targeting gender mainstreaming provisions to take into account the specific travel and transport needs of WS and WHH.

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.

Subject

Transportation,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference30 articles.

1. Andrews C and Kryeziu A (2013) Background Paper for the World Development Report 2013: Public Works and the Jobs Agenda: Pathways for Social Cohesion. World Bank, Washington, DC, USA.

2. Roads to Poverty Reduction? Exploring Rural Roads' Impact on Mobility in Africa and Asia

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