Ejemplares similares: Do shocks affect men's and women's assets differently? Evidence from Bangladesh and Uganda
- Do shocks affect men's and women's assets differently? A review of literature and new evidence from Bangladesh and Uganda
- Do shocks affect men’s and women’s assets differently? Evidence from Bangladesh and Uganda
- Do men and women accumulate assets in different ways? Evidence from rural Bangladesh
- Poverty transitions, shocks, and consumption in rural Bangladesh: Preliminary results from a longitudinal household survey
- Impact of- and lessons learned from WFP's nutrition-sensitive, shock-responsive food assistance for assets program in Sri Lanka on men's and women's dietary intake
- The impact of shocks on gender-differentiated asset dynamics in Bangladesh
Autor: Quisumbing, Agnes R.
- WE4.2: Can Agricultural Development Projects Reach, Benefit, and Empower Women? Results from South Asia and Africa using the Project-Level Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (pro-WEAI)
- Gender, assets, and agricultural development: Lessons from eight projects
- Beyond “death do us part”: The long-term implications of divorce perceptions on women’s well-being and child schooling in rural Ethiopia
- What decisions can women make in Banke, Nepal? Women’s agency and perceptions of domestic violence
- Gender differences in wealth transfers and expenditure allocation: evidence from the rural Philippines
- Human capital, productivity, and labor allocation in rural Pakistan
Autor: Kumar, Neha
- Beyond “death do us part”: The long-term implications of divorce perceptions on women’s well-being and child schooling in rural Ethiopia
- What decisions can women make in Banke, Nepal? Women’s agency and perceptions of domestic violence
- Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
- Why gender-sensitive social protection is critical to the COVID-19 response in low- and middle-income countries
- Examining the State of Community-led Development Programming: Reflections on the report
- Linking social protection to agriculture: Evidence from Ethiopia