Voice and agency : empowering women and girls for shared prosperity
Voice and agency : empowering women and girls for shared prosperity
This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank Group with external contributions.
- [Washington, DC : World Bank Group, 2014
- electronic document (226 pages); PDF file: 19.33 MB
This is a major new report by the World Bank that shines a spotlight on the value of voice and agency, the patterns of constraints that limit their realisation, and the associated costs, not only to individual women but to their families, communities, and societies. It highlights promising policies and interventions, and it identifies priority areas where further research and more and better data and evidence are needed. Underlining that agency has both intrinsic and instrumental, concrete value, this report puts advancing women’s voice
and agency squarely on the international development agenda. (from the Executive summary). Use the website link to access the Executive summary, background papers and more.
ATTITUDES
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)
CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
EMPOWERMENT
GENDER
JUSTICE
PRIMARY PREVENTION
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
WOMEN
PREVENTION
This is a major new report by the World Bank that shines a spotlight on the value of voice and agency, the patterns of constraints that limit their realisation, and the associated costs, not only to individual women but to their families, communities, and societies. It highlights promising policies and interventions, and it identifies priority areas where further research and more and better data and evidence are needed. Underlining that agency has both intrinsic and instrumental, concrete value, this report puts advancing women’s voice
and agency squarely on the international development agenda. (from the Executive summary). Use the website link to access the Executive summary, background papers and more.
ATTITUDES
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)
CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
EMPOWERMENT
GENDER
JUSTICE
PRIMARY PREVENTION
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
WOMEN
PREVENTION