Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts

Women’s empowerment is a driving concept in feminist and gender scholarship and is seen as an indicator of a woman’s agency in social and economic spheres. Yet, there is much debate over what this term actually means, how it should be operationalized as a concept in development research. This has be...

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Main Authors: McOmber C, D'Auria Riley, T., McKune, Sarah, Russo, Sandra
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/68681
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author McOmber C
D'Auria Riley, T.
McKune, Sarah
Russo, Sandra
author_browse D'Auria Riley, T.
McKune, Sarah
McOmber C
Russo, Sandra
author_facet McOmber C
D'Auria Riley, T.
McKune, Sarah
Russo, Sandra
author_sort McOmber C
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Women’s empowerment is a driving concept in feminist and gender scholarship and is seen as an indicator of a woman’s agency in social and economic spheres. Yet, there is much debate over what this term actually means, how it should be operationalized as a concept in development research. This has been especially true among scholars and practitioners who use empowerment as a guideline by which to measure and evaluate social dynamics in communities affected by climate change. Most recently, the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index has joined a growing number of tools aimed at measuring empowerment in developing countries. Such indexes however, are unable to account for culturally specific meaning and nuance that shape local understandings of empowerment. This article introduces qualitative and ethnographic methodological tools that provide a means to understand and engage culturally specific, local definitions of empowerment. We seek to first identify those indicators most salient within the village communities participating in the study. We then seek to understand the implications of these conceptualizations in the broader context of climate information accessibility and utilization. This study was implemented in four rural villages located within Kenya and Senegal, each with varying levels of interaction with CCAFS programs. Cross-examination of site specific data yields an understanding of how cultural norms and values shape local perceptions of empowerment in ways that are critical for development practitioners and scholars who to understand how power operates within communities affected by climate shocks. Such analysis is critical to a more accurate understanding of the locally specific context of gender inequity from which to align development-based programs. This article serves to broaden the definition of women’s power to include culturally-relevant variations in the concept and provides one methodology for doing so.
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spelling CGSpace686812025-08-18T06:33:03Z Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts McOmber C D'Auria Riley, T. McKune, Sarah Russo, Sandra climate change agriculture food security gender empowerment methods Women’s empowerment is a driving concept in feminist and gender scholarship and is seen as an indicator of a woman’s agency in social and economic spheres. Yet, there is much debate over what this term actually means, how it should be operationalized as a concept in development research. This has been especially true among scholars and practitioners who use empowerment as a guideline by which to measure and evaluate social dynamics in communities affected by climate change. Most recently, the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index has joined a growing number of tools aimed at measuring empowerment in developing countries. Such indexes however, are unable to account for culturally specific meaning and nuance that shape local understandings of empowerment. This article introduces qualitative and ethnographic methodological tools that provide a means to understand and engage culturally specific, local definitions of empowerment. We seek to first identify those indicators most salient within the village communities participating in the study. We then seek to understand the implications of these conceptualizations in the broader context of climate information accessibility and utilization. This study was implemented in four rural villages located within Kenya and Senegal, each with varying levels of interaction with CCAFS programs. Cross-examination of site specific data yields an understanding of how cultural norms and values shape local perceptions of empowerment in ways that are critical for development practitioners and scholars who to understand how power operates within communities affected by climate shocks. Such analysis is critical to a more accurate understanding of the locally specific context of gender inequity from which to align development-based programs. This article serves to broaden the definition of women’s power to include culturally-relevant variations in the concept and provides one methodology for doing so. 2015-10-27 2015-10-27T11:02:27Z 2015-10-27T11:02:27Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/68681 en Open Access application/pdf McOmber C, d’Auria Ryley T, McKune S, Russo S. 2015. Community Concept Drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts. CCAFS Working Paper no. 136. Copenhagen, Denmark: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
gender
empowerment
methods
McOmber C
D'Auria Riley, T.
McKune, Sarah
Russo, Sandra
Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title_full Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title_fullStr Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title_full_unstemmed Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title_short Community concept drawing: Application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across African contexts
title_sort community concept drawing application of a participatory tool for analyzing empowerment across african contexts
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
gender
empowerment
methods
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/68681
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