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Conceptualising Empowerment

Where's the Power in Women's Empowerment?

Women's empowerment has risen to the top of the development agenda. Millions are spent every year on implementing programmes aimed at giving women and girls more choice and opportunity. And yet surprisingly little work has been done on how women themselves experience the process of empowerment - what their journeys have been, what they have gained and what might be learnt from their experiences.


Members of the Pathways Team Discussing Empowerment

Perween Hasan, Dhaka University


Kristina Hallez, AUC Cairo

Simeen Mahmud, Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies

Samia Huq, BRAC

Samia Rahim, BRAC

Maheen Sultan, BRAC

Understanding what works to enable women to empower themselves is critical to success in fostering women's empowerment. To gain that understanding we need to go beyond one-size-fits all recipes or one-shot solutions. Empowerment is not a destination that can be reached once and for all. It is a process through which people gain consciousness of the constraints that affect their lives, and the inner strength and solidarity with others to overcome these constraints. Empowerment is fundamentally about power. It is not something that can be given, or something that can be done for someone else. In taking power, women can change societies in which women are not treated equally or fairly in any aspect of their lives.

For some development agencies, there are short cuts to women's empowerment. There is a set repertoire of interventions that are carried out in the name of 'women's empowerment'. All are aimed at giving women increased choices. But all too often, the choices that are available exist within - and sometimes even unwittingly reinforce - an changed and unfair social and gender order.

The commitment that most development agencies and governments have to gender equality makes women's empowerment about more than this. Linking women's empowerment with gender equality bridges enabling women to gain the power to act in transforming their own lives with strategies for changing the inequitable gender relations that affect everyone. And this calls for putting power back into approaches to women's empowerment in development.

Being Strategic about the Meanings of Women's Empowerment

Conceptualising Empowerment  in Global Spaces and the Shaping of International Policies and Practice about Women

Comoros, schoolgirls look at globe

Giacomo Pirozzi/Panos

This project consists of a critical review of conceptual assumptions about women’s empowerment that are being globally developed and communicated and the relation between these assumptions and evolving international policy and practice in relation to alternative pathways of empowerment. The rationale for this project is to explore the meanings and debates  within and among sets of actors with a global reach that are shaping values, ideas and policy actions (or absence of actions) on women’s empowerment. 

The Global Hub held a conference for the project at Dunford House in Sussex from 11-12 February and Rosalind Eyben (Convenor of the Global Hub) provided a brief report from the meeting for the IDS webpage. Link here.

Changing Times, Changing Lives

The purpose of this study is to identify and analyse changes in women's lives in Salvador, Bahia over the last three generations, and how these changes relate to processes of women's empowerment.

The project began in July 2007 and involves working with a panel of 400 women from different generations living in the Plataforma region of Bahia, Brazil. Young girls from the region and university students will be trained to use media equipment to interview their mothers and grandmothers on how life has changed in the region. Almost all (but 2) of the young interns come from working class families, and they, themselves have lived stories of empowerment just by making it to the university.

In November, the interns working on this project held a photography show to display the results of the photography course they had been on. The pictures were taken at the Universidade Federal da Bahia campus and in Feira de São Joaquim, a famous market in Salvador. Fernanda Capibaribe, the course trainer, has put together a slide show from the photographs and this is available to view on youtube.

Pathways of Women's Empowerment

To launch our partnership with Open Democracy in July 2007, Andrea wrote about women's empowerment and its meanings in development today.

See: Link to Open Democracy

Changing Images of Women in Bangladesh

Pathways South Asia hub recently ran a photography competition and exhibition on changing images of women. The project was an attempt to see what amateur photographers would see as emerging and new images of women and to document the audiences’ reactions to these images. The project process has been designed both as a communication and research project that is being carefully monitored at each stage of the process. The final exhibition of the work produced in the project is being toured around several venues in Bangladesh, and focus group discussions held on peoples’ reaction to the photographs.

Pathways employed the photographer Ismat Jahan to design and manage the project from conception, through training to the delivery of the final report. Ismat started working as a professional photographer from 2001.  She graduated from New York Institute of Photography in Professional Photography.   She has worked primarily in product photography but is also particularly interested in both Nature Photography and Portraiture. Ismat has had two solo exhibitions in Bangladesh. Her work can be seen at http://www.ijphoto.com

The photographs

We have chosen six of the photographs from the exhibition to give a sense of the kind of work produced by the project.

Girls by a lake
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Girls sitting in the park by Badrun Nahar Ruba


Visibility of young women outside, specially, in public places is new to Bangladesh.  Three or four young girls gossiping and sitting in a park is really new in the context of our country. Ten years ago, it was common to see men chatting and boys playing in the parks - women were not usually seen around, unless accompanied by a male or an older female guardian. It is now common to see women in public spaces - laughing, sharing peanuts, gossiping and having fun. Not all public spaces are male spaces any longer.