What is ‘women empowerment’?
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Women have faced discrimination when it comes to inheritance rights. /Net photo

In this day and age where ‘empowerment’ has become the buzzword promoting gender equality, Sans Aucun Doute came across this interesting perspective in the HUFFPOST blog on:

‘What is Women’s Empowerment?’ by Jin In:

Empowering girls and women is powerful. Today, we know it is the key to economic growth, political stability, and social transformation. World leaders, experts and scholars alike are giving their voice to this critical endeavour.

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When women succeed, nations are more safe, secure and prosperous.

Barack Obama, 44th US President

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There is no tool for development more effective than the empowerment of women.

Kofi Annan, 7th UN Secretary General

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Empowering women is key to building a future we want.

Amartya Sen, Nobel Prize Laureate in Economics

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So then, why isn’t this happening on a mass scale?

Brutal reality: Violence against girls and women on a mass scale

Astonishingly, the exact opposite is true on the ground. Rather than uplifting and empowering girls and women as the most powerful force for transformation and progress, horrific violence is perpetrated against them...every minute, every hour, every day.

Every minute, two girls and women are raped in South Africa.

Every hour, 48 girls and women are raped as a weapon of war in Congo.

Every day, three women are killed by their male partner in the United States.

In fact, more than 100 million girl babies have been killed, aborted, and neglected to die...simply because they were girls. Girls are truly the dying breed.

So how do we empower girls and women? And what exactly is women’s empowerment?

Surprisingly, there is no common definition of women’s empowerment. In fact, the word "empowerment” does not exist in most languages. Although the phrase "women’s empowerment” is used pervasively in the Gender Equality & Women’s Empowerment space (and beyond), it is generally in the context of issues — economic empowerment, political participation, and girls’ education.

Furthermore, most of the data that has been collected is on gender equality — or more accurately inequality — counting the number of boys vs. girls, men vs. women. There is dearth of information on women’s empowerment, particularly at the global level.

Defining empowerment and gathering the data: First-ever global survey on women’s empowerment

According to the World Bank: Empowerment is the process of increasing the capacity of individuals or groups to make choices and to transform those choices into desired actions and outcomes.

Empowerment is a process. Through the process, an individual becomes an agent of change. More simply put, it’s the "can do” factor, going from "I can’t” to "I can.”

So, are girls and women empowered?

4GGL - For Girls GLocal Leadership - simply asked them. As a non-profit and a social change movement with the mission of igniting the next generation of empowered women leaders and change makers around the world, 4GGL launched the first-ever global survey on women’s empowerment, targeting today’s millennial women.

From Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, young women (and young men) participated in our online survey. We received the most voices from the Middle East and the United States. Here is a snapshot of our preliminary findings:

. More than ever before, today’s young women have more choices and control in their lives. They had the most choices in education, the least in career choices.

.What do young women want to change the most in their lives? Their career and income, followed by personal development (physical, mental and habitual).

.Who contributes the most to creating this change? More than 60 per cent identified themselves. Family and government were distant second and third (18 per cent, 15 per cent respectively.) Friends were the least contributing factor.

.Now the critical question: For those young women who became agents of change - empowered - how did this happen? A staggering 46 per cent replied "self-awareness,” a process of "knowing who they are.” This was followed by experience. Education was a distant third.

This is revolutionary. Given that girls’ education is the main focus and what is funded in today’s girls’ empowerment work; it is time to rethink our strategy and action around the world. This is not to say girls’ education isn’t important, or shouldn’t be funded. It is to boldly challenge conventional assumptions on what empowers girls and young women. It is also to invite partners in more data collection and to scale this endeavour.

Foremost, it is a call to action to support girls and young women in self-actualising their inner power - empower - to truly leapfrog women’s empowerment. The next generation of empowered women leaders and change makers will transform our world.

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