The impacts of cash transfers on women’s empowerment: Learning from Pakistan’s BISP program
Large-scale government cash transfer programs have become an important element of social protection and poverty reduction strategies throughout the developing world. Pakistan is no exception; in 2008, Pakistan established the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) as an unconditional cash transfer ta...
| Main Authors: | , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Artículo preliminar |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
World Bank
2017
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148457 |
Similar Items: The impacts of cash transfers on women’s empowerment: Learning from Pakistan’s BISP program
- Cash transfers and women’s agency: Evidence from Pakistan’s BISP program
- Measuring women’s decisionmaking: Indicator choice and survey design experiments from cash and food transfer evaluations in Ecuador, Uganda, and Yemen
- Household labor supply and social protection: Evidence from Pakistan’s BISP cash transfer program
- Measuring women’s decisionmaking: Indicator choice and survey design experiments from cash and food transfer evaluations in Ecuador, Uganda and Yemen
- From bargaining power to empowerment: Measuring the unmeasurable
- Cash transfers, gender norms, and women’s control over decision-making in Egypt