Friday, October 13, 2017

Enhancing Rural Women’s Access to Relevant Knowledge, Assets, Capacities and Livelihood Strategies

Written by Christiana Charles-Iyoha

 The plight of women as an economically, socially and politically disenfranchised community in Africa is aptly summed up by Mzee Mwalimu Julius Nyerere when he noted that “Women in Africa toil all their lives on land that they do not own, to produce what they do not control and at the end of a marriage through divorce or death, they can be sent away empty handed”.

Women as a group account for over 70% of people living in poverty particularly in developing and least developed economies and 50% of the populace worldwide generally.  In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, women form nearly 50% of a population that is under very heavy pressures from a social organizational pattern that is inherently unprepared for sustainable development and the socio-economic transformation of the poor, vulnerable and marginalized peoples, largely located in the rural areas and peri-urban areas.

Women’s poverty is further heightened by limited or lack of access to productive resources.  The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) recently noted that in the rural areas where the majority of the world’s hungry live, women and girls produce most of the food consumed locally.  Their contribution could be far greater if they had equal access to essential resources and services, including information.  Rural women have even less access to information and technologies than men and are thus at a disadvantage when it comes to making informed choices about what to produce and how best to market their products.  Lack of information also limits their influence in their communities and their ability to participate in decision-making.

Issues of access to productive resources often evoke issues of power relations and marginalisation.  Women, an already excluded class by reason of customary practices and religious practices that locate women in families as legal minors subject to the authority of either the father or the husband in the private sphere are further   excluded from accessing productive resources, usually located in the public sphere.  Patricia McFadden captures this scenario aptly    noting that “Through rituals and practices that have become euphemistically understood as 'cultural' and 'traditional', women's capacities and abilities to labour and to reproduce are institutionalized in the patriarchal family as the private property of their fathers and husbands”.

Emerging from women’s lack of access to productive resources are far reaching poverty implications as they have to face a narrower choice of economic options including engagement in high risk behaviour such as vulnerability to being trafficked for forced labor or prostitution, involvement in the informal sector with daily harassments, slave labor in export processing zones and involvement in the global sex tourism industry as victims or perpetrators of the crime against women and humanity.