FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali

How does women's engagement in civil society organizations (CSOs) differ from that of men, and what factors predict women's willingness to hold the state accountable? We analyze these questions in the context of rural and urban Mali, leveraging face-to-face data collected as part of a civil society...

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Autores principales: Kosec, Katrina, Bleck, Jaimie, Gottlieb, Jessica
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125611
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author Kosec, Katrina
Bleck, Jaimie
Gottlieb, Jessica
author_browse Bleck, Jaimie
Gottlieb, Jessica
Kosec, Katrina
author_facet Kosec, Katrina
Bleck, Jaimie
Gottlieb, Jessica
author_sort Kosec, Katrina
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description How does women's engagement in civil society organizations (CSOs) differ from that of men, and what factors predict women's willingness to hold the state accountable? We analyze these questions in the context of rural and urban Mali, leveraging face-to-face data collected as part of a civil society mapping project during February-March 2020 and December 2020, and an in-depth survey conducted with leaders from a randomly-selected subset of these CSOs during January -- March 2021. First, we explore the characteristics of women's groups compared to other CSOs. Second, we explore their likelihood of sanctioning a hypothetical corrupt mayor. We use an embedded survey experiment to try to understand these groups' willingness to report on the mayor. We find that women in Mali are often highly organized at the local level with great mobilization capacity than men--frequently in self-help groups or organizations related to gendered economic activities. However, they are not typically recognized by outside actors; their strong networks and group infrastructure represent untapped social capital. CSOs comprised of women have lower informational and technical capacity, including lower levels of political knowledge, and incur a higher cost of sanctioning public officials. Women are generally less willing than men to sanction, but become more likely when their CSO is less hierarchical, when their technical capacity is higher, and when their political knowledge is greater. However, priming their importance as a CSO (by telling them they were identified by well-connected citizens as influential) reduces sanctioning--perhaps by making them fear reprisals from recommenders.
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spelling CGSpace1256112025-11-06T05:23:09Z FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali Kosec, Katrina Bleck, Jaimie Gottlieb, Jessica gender agriculture How does women's engagement in civil society organizations (CSOs) differ from that of men, and what factors predict women's willingness to hold the state accountable? We analyze these questions in the context of rural and urban Mali, leveraging face-to-face data collected as part of a civil society mapping project during February-March 2020 and December 2020, and an in-depth survey conducted with leaders from a randomly-selected subset of these CSOs during January -- March 2021. First, we explore the characteristics of women's groups compared to other CSOs. Second, we explore their likelihood of sanctioning a hypothetical corrupt mayor. We use an embedded survey experiment to try to understand these groups' willingness to report on the mayor. We find that women in Mali are often highly organized at the local level with great mobilization capacity than men--frequently in self-help groups or organizations related to gendered economic activities. However, they are not typically recognized by outside actors; their strong networks and group infrastructure represent untapped social capital. CSOs comprised of women have lower informational and technical capacity, including lower levels of political knowledge, and incur a higher cost of sanctioning public officials. Women are generally less willing than men to sanction, but become more likely when their CSO is less hierarchical, when their technical capacity is higher, and when their political knowledge is greater. However, priming their importance as a CSO (by telling them they were identified by well-connected citizens as influential) reduces sanctioning--perhaps by making them fear reprisals from recommenders. 2022-10 2022-11-23T06:52:05Z 2022-11-23T06:52:05Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125611 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Kosec, Katrina; Bleck, Jaimie; Gottlieb, Jessica. 2022. Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali. Presented a the CGIAR GENDER Science Exchange, Nairobi, 12-14 October 2022. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125611
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
Kosec, Katrina
Bleck, Jaimie
Gottlieb, Jessica
FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title_full FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title_fullStr FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title_full_unstemmed FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title_short FR2.3: Women's Voices in Civil Society Organizations: Evidence from a Civil Society Mapping Project in Mali
title_sort fr2 3 women s voices in civil society organizations evidence from a civil society mapping project in mali
topic gender
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125611
work_keys_str_mv AT koseckatrina fr23womensvoicesincivilsocietyorganizationsevidencefromacivilsocietymappingprojectinmali
AT bleckjaimie fr23womensvoicesincivilsocietyorganizationsevidencefromacivilsocietymappingprojectinmali
AT gottliebjessica fr23womensvoicesincivilsocietyorganizationsevidencefromacivilsocietymappingprojectinmali