Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh

This series of notes summarizes findings of a project entitled "What development interventions work?" undertaken by researchers of the Chronic Poverty Research Centre, the International Food Policy Research Institute, and Data Analysis and Technical Assistance Ltd. As part of a larger longitudinal s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kumar, Neha, Quisumbing, Agnes R.
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154288
_version_ 1855541144744624128
author Kumar, Neha
Quisumbing, Agnes R.
author_browse Kumar, Neha
Quisumbing, Agnes R.
author_facet Kumar, Neha
Quisumbing, Agnes R.
author_sort Kumar, Neha
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This series of notes summarizes findings of a project entitled "What development interventions work?" undertaken by researchers of the Chronic Poverty Research Centre, the International Food Policy Research Institute, and Data Analysis and Technical Assistance Ltd. As part of a larger longitudinal study that resurveyed 1,907 households and 102 villages in 14 of Bangladesh's 64 districts, the project focused on assessing the long-term impacts of a number of anti-poverty interventions-specifically, microfinance, agricultural technology, and educational transfers- on a range of monetary and nonmonetary measures of well-being. This note focuses on the long-term impacts on men's and women's assets of disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals compared with groups. It is hoped that these results will help policymakers, donors, and other stakeholders to effectively evaluate different interventions thereby contributing to the design of future anti-poverty programs in South Asia. Many of the best-studied programs targeting women in Bangladesh- particularly microfinance programs directed toward poor women-have operated through women's groups. In these programs, group liability acts as a substitute for personally owned assets as a form of collateral. Whereas some evidence does suggest that collective action has a positive impact on gender relations and broader development objectives like reducing poverty, when evaluating impact, many studies do not satisfactorily account for other factors associated with participation in collective action. For example, it is possible that women who are more "empowered" to begin with are more likely both to participate in and benefit from collective-action programs, perhaps because of greater wealth, higher levels of schooling, or better social connectedness. The panel data set employed in this study addresses this issue by providing the necessary conditions for more rigorous, long-term impact evaluation.
format Brief
id CGSpace154288
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1542882025-11-06T04:45:41Z Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh Kumar, Neha Quisumbing, Agnes R. assets gender impact assessment social capital time use patterns This series of notes summarizes findings of a project entitled "What development interventions work?" undertaken by researchers of the Chronic Poverty Research Centre, the International Food Policy Research Institute, and Data Analysis and Technical Assistance Ltd. As part of a larger longitudinal study that resurveyed 1,907 households and 102 villages in 14 of Bangladesh's 64 districts, the project focused on assessing the long-term impacts of a number of anti-poverty interventions-specifically, microfinance, agricultural technology, and educational transfers- on a range of monetary and nonmonetary measures of well-being. This note focuses on the long-term impacts on men's and women's assets of disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals compared with groups. It is hoped that these results will help policymakers, donors, and other stakeholders to effectively evaluate different interventions thereby contributing to the design of future anti-poverty programs in South Asia. Many of the best-studied programs targeting women in Bangladesh- particularly microfinance programs directed toward poor women-have operated through women's groups. In these programs, group liability acts as a substitute for personally owned assets as a form of collateral. Whereas some evidence does suggest that collective action has a positive impact on gender relations and broader development objectives like reducing poverty, when evaluating impact, many studies do not satisfactorily account for other factors associated with participation in collective action. For example, it is possible that women who are more "empowered" to begin with are more likely both to participate in and benefit from collective-action programs, perhaps because of greater wealth, higher levels of schooling, or better social connectedness. The panel data set employed in this study addresses this issue by providing the necessary conditions for more rigorous, long-term impact evaluation. 2010 2024-10-01T14:00:39Z 2024-10-01T14:00:39Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154288 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Kumar, Neha; Quisumbing, Agnes R. 2010. Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh. Evaluating the long-term impact of antipoverty interventions in rural Bangladesh. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154288
spellingShingle assets
gender
impact assessment
social capital
time use patterns
Kumar, Neha
Quisumbing, Agnes R.
Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title_full Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title_short Does social capital build women's assets? Disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in Bangladesh
title_sort does social capital build women s assets disseminating agricultural technologies to individuals versus groups in bangladesh
topic assets
gender
impact assessment
social capital
time use patterns
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154288
work_keys_str_mv AT kumarneha doessocialcapitalbuildwomensassetsdisseminatingagriculturaltechnologiestoindividualsversusgroupsinbangladesh
AT quisumbingagnesr doessocialcapitalbuildwomensassetsdisseminatingagriculturaltechnologiestoindividualsversusgroupsinbangladesh