Chapter Four

Women

Transforming Food Systems for Empowerment and Equity

Hazel Malapit, Ruth Meinzen-Dick, Agnes Quisumbing, and Laura Zseleczky

Ensuring that women’s contributions to food systems are recognized—by their families, communities, policymakers, and society more broadly—and that women can make strategic choices about their involvement in food systems has benefits for all of society.

KEY FINDINGS

  • Women are actively involved in food systems in many roles, but their contributions are often not formally recognized, and they face obstacles to engaging on equitable and fair terms.
  • Together with changing diets, transformation of food systems toward more efficient and sustainable pro­duction processes and longer value chains offers new opportunities and challenges for women’s participation.
  • Transforming food systems for inclusion means not just ensuring women’s participation and access to benefits but also their empowerment to make strategic life choices.
  • Entrepreneurship is often touted as a key to empowering women, but evidence indicates that it may not empower women if limited to small, household-based enterprises.

KEY RECOMMENDATIONS

  • Increase women’s decision-making power and control over resources and assets (such as credit, land, training, trans­port, and technology) within households and communities.
  • Raise women’s voices in key processes such as negotiations with market actors, research decisions, and politi­cal processes.
  • Include women and consider women’s needs and pref­erences in the design of institutions, including property rights, financial institutions, and access to information and education.
  • Collect and evaluate more data relevant to women’s empowerment within food systems, including on capacities, motivations, and roles in value chains.
  • Encourage private sector initiatives to foster women’s empowerment, including adoption of standards for gender equity, women’s empowerment, and women’s leadership.
  • Ensure that food system transformations do not disem­power women by increasing workloads or reducing decision-making power, but rather create a virtuous cycle of inclusion and empowerment to benefit women and men.

Browse Chapters

Chapter One

Reshaping Food Systems

Chapter Two

Smallholders and Rural People

Chapter Three

Youth

Chapter Four

Women

Chapter Five

Refugees and Conflict-Affected People

Chapter Six

National Food Systems

DOWNLOADS

Chapter One: Reshaping Food Systems

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Chapter Two: Smallholders and Rural People

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Chapter Three: Youth

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Chapter Four: Women

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Chapter Five: Refugees and Conflict-Affected People

(Download PDF 340KB)

Chapter Six: National Food Systems

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