Foreword
During the last twenty years, IFAD has learned a great deal
about the prevalence and causes of poverty and malnutrition,
and has increasingly recognized that taking a gender perspective
helps to illuminate the nature of rural
poverty.
A gender perspective looks at how and why men and women experience
poverty differently and become poor through different processes
and, in turn, how rural development presents different opportunities
and challenges for men and women.
Across all geographical regions, women play a focal (although
often unrecognized) role in the survival strategies and economy
of poor rural households. Increasing the economic resilience
of the poor is largely about enabling women to realize their
socio-economic potential more fully and improve the quality
of their lives. To do so, women need access to assets, services,
knowledge and technologies, and must be active in decision-making
processes. Greater gender equity means that women are able to
express their potential, to the benefit of the entire household
and community.
At the same time, evaluations have shown that if gender specificities
are not taken into account projects may increase womens
workload, thus affecting their caregiving responsibilities and
health. Projects may also negatively affect womens control
over resources and technologies. Thus gender analysis in design
and gender-sensitive monitoring and evaluation (M&E) are
needed to identify risks and recommend preventive measures.
In addition,
variations by gender in roles, relations and the control of
assets within a region and within a country can
be significant. Approaches that have succeeded in one place
may not be applicable in another. IFAD recognizes that specific
mainstreaming strategies need to be developed to suit different
project contexts.
This booklet is the outcome of the review of gender issues
in IFADs ongoing projects presented to the Executive Board
in May 2000 as part of the Progress Report on the Project Portfolio.
It illustrates some of the opportunities regarding gender that
IFAD has explored in the course of its initiatives. Perhaps
more importantly, it highlights challenges that have emerged
and that must be addressed if there is to be a significant decline
in hunger and poverty early in this millennium.
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