Skip to main content
Project

Evaluating the impact of holistic participatory programs on reducing and redistributing unpaid care work among women in Rwanda
 

Rwanda
Project ID
109644
Total Funding
CAD 690,100.00
IDRC Officer
Annet Abenakyo Mulema
Project Status
Active
Duration
36 months

Programs and partnerships

Lead institution(s)

Summary

In Rwanda, a local organization is implementing an initiative using a holistic and participatory approach to address systemic barriers faced by rural women.Read more

In Rwanda, a local organization is implementing an initiative using a holistic and participatory approach to address systemic barriers faced by rural women. The approach includes empowering and sensitizing women’s groups about the burden of unpaid care work, implementing time-use charts to track the time that women and men spend on different activities, providing improved access to water points and cooking stoves to save time, and sensitizing communities to break deeply ingrained societal beliefs that place the burden of unpaid care work on women. Assessments to date indicate that this initiative has been effective and holds promise for reducing and redistributing unpaid work in Rwanda. However, the potential for replication and scale-up, as well as the program innovations needed to enhance its effectiveness, need to be tested.

This project will use an experimental design to test scalability and program effectiveness. It will also assess the extent to which benefits can be sustained in the short, medium, and long-term to break ingrained beliefs and power relations that promote gender inequality and the persistence of the unpaid care work burden among women. The research team will actively engage with key policy actors to ensure the work informs actions to build back in a more gender-inclusive manner in the response to COVID-19.

This project is supported under the Growth and Economic Opportunities for Women (GrOW) East Africa initiative, jointly funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and IDRC. GrOW East Africa seeks to spur transformative change to advance gender equality in the world of work.

Research outputs

Access full library of outputs Opens in new tab
Paper
Language:

English

Summary

This report provides a descriptive overview of the quantitative baseline data collected in January and February 2022 for a research project evaluating a complex social intervention to reduce and redistribute women’s unpaid care work (UCW) in Rwanda using homegrown solutions. The intervention aims to reduce and redistribute UCW undertaken by women in Rwanda's rural areas, thereby improving their quality of life and increasing their empowerment. The findings discussed in this report are from a survey of intervention and control households and 7-day time diaries completed by husbands and wives in each household, with some illustrative material from simultaneous qualitative research.

Author(s)
Abbot, Pamela
Brief
Language:

English

Summary

The unequal distribution of unpaid care work (UCW) is an infringement of women’s rights, an impediment to their economic empowerment, the economic contribution they could make to the national economy and a barrier to gender equality and women’s empowerment. If SDG 5 is to be achieved, it is necessary to recognize, reduce and redistribute UCW to enable the economic empowerment of women and the transformation of gender relations. There needs to be a society-wide shift in gender norms and a move to a more equitable society where women can exercise strategic life choices.

Author(s)
Ismail, Byaruhanga
Access full library of outputs Opens in new tab

About the partnership

Partnership(s)

Growth and Economic Opportunities for Women – East Africa

Growth and Economic Opportunities for Women (GrOW) – East Africa spurs transformative change to advance gender equality in the world of work, with a focus on gender segregation, unpaid care, and women’s collective agency.