Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Ghana (original) (raw)

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Nigeria

Geografia: Malaysian journal of society and space, 2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Ethiopia

Geografia: Malaysian journal of society and space, 2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Mali

Geografia: Malaysian journal of society and space, 2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Kenya

2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Zimbabwe

2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

The Nexus between Women’s Empowerment and Poverty Reduction in Urban Ghana: A Study of the HO Municipality

2019

Poverty is a major problem that has occupied the attention of governments, NGOs and International Development Agencies. The poor are denied adequate access to basic necessities such as water, sanitation, health and education etc. Women form the majority of the most vulnerable to poverty. Socio-cultural practices constrain women’s access to resources and decision-making structures, hence their vulnerability. Governments and Development partners have implemented several policies and programmes in order to empower women so they can take decisions and act on them in a manner that transforms their livelihoods. This study assesses the impact of women’s empowerment on poverty reduction in the Ho municipality. It assessed women’s feeling of empowerment as well as the impact of empowerment on access to and use of resources. The study revealed that empowerment has enhanced access to and use of productive resources by women. The researchers recommend that women must be equipped with skills, gi...

Discourses on Women's Empowerment in Ghana

Development, 2010

Successive post-independence governments have embraced women's empowerment in one form or another, either because of their own ideological positioning, the demands by their 'donor friends/partners' and/or organized domestic groups and NGOs. What has emerged is a varied landscape on women's rights and empowerment work comprising the state bureaucracy, multilateral and bilateral agencies, NGOs, and women's rights organizations, with their accompanying discourses. The fact that these discourses (or some versions of them) enter the policy terrain and frame actions means that that they have intended and unintended effects. In the Ghanaian context, Nana Akua Anyidoho and Takyiwaa Manuh look at what the discourse of empowerment highlights, ignore or occlude, the convergences and divergences among them, and how they speak to or accord with the lived realities of the majority of Ghanaian women. Given that the policy landscape in Ghana is highly influenced by donors, they ask which discourses dominate, and how are they used for improving women's lives in ways that are meaningful to them?

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Lesotho

Geografia: Malaysian journal of society and space, 2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Women and liveability – Best practices of empowerment from Indonesia

Geografia: Malaysian journal of society and space, 2017

How to survive and make ends meet and how to improve the quality of life are daily and persistent livelihood issues and liveability challenges preoccupying disadvantaged communities in underdeveloped and developing countries. In economically restrictive and HIV hazardous Lesotho life struggles could be complex and challenging for womenfolks who more often than not are left on their own to cope with daily liveability problems. Through examining the findings from secondary information sources this paper illustrates three cases of how women helped make the best of empowerment projects geared to make the livelihood and liveability of themselves, their family and community better and more meaningful. It also highlights the institutional and organizational traits that were also the success factors of the empowerment projects.

Empowering Rural Women for Gender Equality in Ashanti Region of Ghana Through Programmes and Projects

International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications, 2018

Women empowerment has been an issue for discussion all over the world. One of the major means of empowering women throughout the world is by the use of programmes and projects. This study is designed to ascertain whether or not the available women empowerment programme in Ghana really empower women to challenge the gender inequality status quo and, to explore an alternative direction to improve on women empowerment programme. Thus, the study attempts to assess the efforts made by two of such programmes-Livelihood Empowerment against Poverty (LEAP), a Government intervention and, Care International project for women empowerment, an non-governmental intervention. Theories such as Marx's class theory, functionalism theory as well as conflict theory were used to explain why gender inequality exist and the need to consider the basic causes of gender inequality in designing any women empowerment programme. The central theory used in explaining how these available interventions approach women empowerment is deficit thinking theory. The study used qualitative and descriptive statistics method. As the study explored an alternative direction for women empowerment programmes, it used exploratory research design. Interview and focus group discussions were used to elicit information from the women. The analysis were made based on the data collected from the selected programme and project such as CARE international and Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP).The main findings was that the available projects and programmes only provide mitigation measures to support women and do not address the root causes of what disempower women and therefore their effort do not challenge the status quo. What the study found to be the better practice for women empowerment programmes to improve the women status is to target a particular gender inequality and design an appropriate women empowerment programme that tackles the root cause of it.