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On
norms & agency: Conversations about gender equality with women
and men in 20 countries
World
Bank
December 2010
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Abstract
Social norms, gender
roles, beliefs about one's own capacity, and assets, as well as
communities and countries, determine the opportunities available
to women and men - and their ability to take advantage of them.
World Development Report 2012 shows significant progress in many
areas, but gender disparities still persist.
Our study covered 20
countries in all world regions, where over 4,000 women and men,
in remote and traditional villages and dense urban neighborhoods,
in more than 500 focus groups, discussed the effects of gender differences
and inequalities on their lives. Despite diverse social and cultural
settings, traits and expectations of the ideal "good"
woman and "good" man were remarkably similar across all
sample urban and rural communities. Participants acknowledged that
women are actively seeking equal power and freedom, but must constantly
negotiate and resist traditional expectations about what they are
to do and who they are to be. When women achieve the freedom to
work for pay or get more education, they must still accommodate
their gains to these expectations, especially on household responsibilities.
Girls' desire for education,
which nurtures their aspirations for greater agency, exceeded that
of boys in rural and urban communities. Both young women and men
wished for more education and better jobs than are common in their
communities and strikingly wanted to marry later, bear children
later, and have more autonomy in choosing their partners than traditional
community norms dictated.
The main pathways
for women to gain agency are education, employment, and decreased
risk of domestic violence. A safer space encourages women to negotiate
for more participation and equality in household discussions and
decisions. Women's ability to contribute to family finances and
control (even partially) major or minor assets helps them gain more
voice at home and in public spheres. Women's aspirations and empowerment
to break gender barriers occur regardless of dynamic or poor economies,
while men's perceived gain in agency - and their identity as breadwinner
- largely depends on economic conditions.
When only a few women
manage to break with established norms - without a critical mass
- traditional norms are not contested and may be reinforced. The
process of gender norm change thus appears to be uneven and challenging,
lagging behind topical conditions. The easy co-existence of new
and old norms means that households in the same community can vary
markedly in how much agency women can exercise, and women feel less
empowered when opinions and values of families and communities stay
with traditional norms.
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