When working with women and girls in conflict or displacement situations (actually, when working with anyone, in any situation), we often make assumptions. In this case, the assumption is that “economic opportunities for women and adolescent girls have positive roll-on effects”, according to Mendy Marsh, UNICEF’s Gender Based Violence (GBV) Specialist in Emergencies.
We assume that when women and older adolescent girls have income, they are safer. We assume that when households have income, children are more likely to be in school, that they are accessing healthcare, and that they are better fed, says Marsh.
But do we know whether that is true or not? What does the evidence say?
I took an hour today to listen to Marsh along with Dale Buscher, Senior Director for Programs at the Women’s Refugee Commission (WRC), talk about WRC’s “Peril or Protection: Making Work Safe” Campaign (watch the recording here).
GBV happens in all communities, including stable ones. But when situations become unstable, Marsh noted, a number of additional factors combine to make women and adolescent girls in conflict or displacement settings vulnerable to violence.
These factors include:
- Inadequate legal frameworks –eg., impunity for those committing GBV and a lack of awareness of rights
- Lack of basic survival needs — eg., food, non-food items, fuel, water, safe shelter
- Lack of opportunities – eg., women’s and girls’ financial dependence, potential for exploitative work
- Sociocultural aspects – eg., harmful practices, domestic violence, early and forced marriage
- Insecurity – eg., flight and displacement, no lighting, no safe shelter, non-separate latrines or hygiene facilities for men, women, boys and girls, or facilities that don’t lock or are insecure; dependency on males for information
Emphasis during conflict situations tends to focus on response not prevention, said Marsh. Different agencies and sectors often work in isolation, but no single agency or sector can address GBV. It needs to be addressed across all sectors with strong community participation, including that of men and boys.
Often, she noted, livelihoods programs are brought in as a response to women’s needs and based on the assumptions above. There can be unintended negative effects from these programs and we need to be aware of them so that they can be mitigated.
Following Marsh’s introduction, Busher explained that because WRC wanted to better understand any potential unintended consequences from livelihoods programs aimed at women in conflict or displacement situations, in 2009 they conducted research and produced “Peril or Protection: The Link between Livelihoods and Gender-Baed Violence in Displacement Settings.
There is a very weak evidence base in terms of the links between gender based violence and livelihoods programming, he said.
WRC found that in some cases livelihood programs implemented by NGOs actually increased women’s and adolescent girls’ risks of GBV because of factors such as their entering the public sphere, going to market, using unsafe transportation and domestic conflict. The economic opportunities heightened the risks that women and girls faced. Providing them with income generation opportunities did not necessarily make women and girls safer or give them more control over resources.
The answer is not to stop creating economic opportunities, however. Rather it is to design and implement these kinds of programs in responsible ways that do no harm and that are based on in-depth consultations with women, girls and their communities, livelihoods practitioners and GBV specialists.
Based on their research and with input from different stakeholders, WRC designed a toolkit to help those creating livelihoods programs for and with women and adolescent girls to do so in a way that lessens the risk of GBV.
The process outlined in the toolkit includes secondary research, safety mapping, a safety tool, and a decision chart.
Based on the secondary research, practitioners work with adolescent girls, women and the wider community to map the places that are important for livelihoods, explained Buscher. For example, the bus, a taxi stand, a supply shop, the fields.
Community members discuss where women and girls are safe and where they are not. They describe the kinds of violence and abuse that girls and women experience in these different places.
They identify strategies for protection based on when GBV takes place in the different locations. For example, does it happen year-round? At certain times of year? Only at night? Only on weekends?
They identify and discuss the most risky situations. Is a girl or woman most at risk when she is selling by the side of the road? Alone in a shop?
They also discuss which relationships are the most prone to GBV. Bosses? Suppliers? Buyers? Intimate Partners? Together the women and girls share and discuss the strategies that they use to protect themselves.
An additional tool identifies the social safety net that a women or adolescent girl has, considering that social networks are important both for livelihoods as well as for protection. Ways to strengthen them are discussed.
Finally, a decision chart is created with a list of livelihood activities and the information from the previous charts and discussions to determine the levels of risk in the different kinds of livelihood activities and the potential strategies for mitigating GBV.
Decisions are also made by the adolescent girls and women regarding which risks they are willing to take for which levels of livelihoods.
Marsh and Buscher concluded that safe, dignified work may be the most effective form of protection because it can help mitigate negative coping strategies such as transactional sex, child labor, pulling children out of school, and selling rations.
Livelihoods, however, should not be thought of as a little bit of money to supplement daily rations. They should be sustainable and help meet basic needs in an ongoing way; and they should lead to dignified work. The amount earned and the risks involved for women and girls need to be worth it for them, considering all the other domestic chores that they are required to do. NGOs need to consult with and listen to girls and women to better understand their needs, coping strategies.
If you’d like to learn more about the research, and the toolkit, WRC offers a free e-learning tool on how to make work safe.
You can also follow the #safelivelihoods conversation on twitter.
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Linda thanks for this great post. Dignified work is an inherently valuable goal; there is no question. Yet it does nothing to address the root causes of gender-based violence. The creative strategies devised by women to mitigate the reality of violence against women are valuable forms of agency for self-defence. Yet what is not evidenced in this research is any attempt to address the roots causes causes of violence against women. As your article points out gender-based violence occurs in all communities, whether displaced or stable, deprived or opulent. If development interventions are palliative but leave systems of violence unchallenged then gender-based violence is certain to continue unabated. Perhaps developing women’s critical tools for identifying, voicing and challenging the causes of violence against women would be a more valuable and enduring contribution than a livelihoods focus?
Very good point, Tony! I see it as simultaneous processes. Taking steps in the short term to protect women and girls/help them protect themselves, meanwhile working on longer term efforts to address underlying attitudes. I also think that sometimes attitude changes can happen through concrete activities. For example, showing that when women work, it is not a bad thing; creating space for women to show their capacities and capabilities, etc., and helping ease men’s anxieties; exposing boys to girls and women who have different roles in the home or the community, and helping them see it as positive. Though as you point out, even in places where the majority of women do work, there are still issues of violence and discrimination…. In the case of the WRC work, I wonder if in times of displacement and conflict, voicing and challenging is too disruptive on top of everything else? It would be interesting to think on that one. I know in some conflict and disaster situations, women actually rise to new positions of leadership, but sometimes lose those gains once the conflict is over and men come back to ‘take charge again.’ Very interesting points to ponder….
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