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Introduction to the Research Programme Consortium on ‘Women’s
Empowerment in Muslim Contexts: Gender, Poverty and
Democratisation from the Inside Out’
The Central Research Department of the Department for
International Development (DFID)
has awarded a five-year grant
(1 July 2006 – 30 June 2011) to a Research Programme Consortium
(RPC) on ‘Women’s Empowerment in Muslim Contexts: Gender,
Poverty and Democratisation from the Inside Out’ as part
of their
Factors that
Enhance Women’s Empowerment Research Programme.
(http://www.dfid.gov.uk/research/womenemp.asp).
This RPC, led by the Southeast Asia Research Centre at the City
University of Hong Kong, will undertake an innovative research
programme that will generate new knowledge for achieving
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the fuller
implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action in Muslim
contexts. In particular, research outcomes will contribute
significantly to the attainment of MGD3 (Promote gender equality
and empower women) as the basis for enabling MDG1 (Eradicate
extreme poverty and hunger), MDG5 (Improve maternal health) and
MDG8 (Develop a global partnership for development).
The RPC believes that developing a deeper and more nuanced
understanding of women’s empowerment is the key to designing
effective pro-poor and equity focused policies. Defining
‘empowerment’ as an increased capacity to make autonomous
decisions that transform unfavourable power relations, the RPC
posits that conventional interventions fail to empower women
effectively, because these tend to ignore the power structures
that stand between women and state institutions. To address this
gap, the RPC focuses on meso-level forces that construct
the gender systems within which women’s empowerment necessarily
occurs.
The RPC’s five-year research programme focuses on women’s
indigenous strategies of empowerment in Muslim contexts,
because:
-
Women’s
endeavours to assert their rights in such contexts
are
often suppressed by violence.
-
Women’s
empowerment through indigenous strategies is a culturally
appropriate countervailing force at this time when political
groups are disempowering women so as to
construct closed constituencies.
-
Women’s
empowerment in such contexts would promote
democratisation from the inside out.
Pinpointing
ways whereby
good governance
could empower women
and lead to poverty reduction, the
research will
result in:
-
Innovative
analyses of poverty and women’s economic empowerment
-
Policy
recommendations for governance that would be genuinely
responsive to women’s needs on the ground
-
A
strong articulation of voices and demands for accountability
and change from within society, catalysing processes that
could increase personal choices, decision-making powers, and
access to resources
-
New
development initiatives with women’s organizations at local,
national and international levels.
-
A range of
multi-media products for diverse audiences
Research will be undertaken in China, Indonesia, Iran and
Pakistan as nodal countries, as well as on cross-border
research. In addition, exploratory research will be initiated in
other countries, including Turkey. Aside from the Southeast Asia
Research Centre, City University of Hong Kong (lead
organisation) the Pakistan research team includes the following
institutions:
-
Department
of Community Health Sciences, Aga Khan University
-
Shirkat
Gah – Women’s Resource Centre
In addition to this research team, the WEMC RPC hopes to
collaborate and work closely with existing networks and groups,
as well as identify and ally with individuals engaged in related
endeavours.
The RPC Director is advised by an inter-disciplinary Consortium
Advisory Group (CAG) that is independent of the RPC lead
organisation, with a clearly defined role for assuring quality
control in the RPC programme implementation. In addition to
having two representatives of DFID on the CAG, the RPC’s
confirmed CAG members are:
-
Noeleen
Heyzer, Director of UNIFEM
-
Yakin Erturk, UN Special Rapporteur on Violence
Against Women
-
Elizabeth
Croll, Professor of Chinese Anthropology, Vice-Principal of
the School for Oriental and African Studies, University of
London
-
Bina
Agarwal, Professor of Economics, Institute of Economic Growth,
Dehli University
The CAG will meet formally at least once a year. It will review
and endorse the RPC’s annual report before submission to the CRD.
The RPC also envisages country-based Research Advisory
Committees (RACs) in the four nodal countries to complement the
CAG. Country-based Partners/Associates will identify potential
RAC members.
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