Workshop: Applying the Women’s Empowerment in Agrifood Governance (WEAGov) tool to support gender-responsive policy innovation across Africa

  • From
    CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality
  • Published on
    30.10.24
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A woman carries a bowl across a field that is being prepared for planting cassava in Nigeria.
Photo Credit: George Osodi/PANOS
By Jordan Kyle, Catherine Ragasa, Susan Kaaria, Margaret Mangheni, Dorine Odongo, and Anne Omamo

Well-designed and well-implemented agrifood policies can play a significant role in closing gender gaps and setting countries on a pathway toward sustainable and equitable food systems. IFPRI’s new Women’s Empowerment in Agrifood Governance (WEAGov) assessment tool—developed with support from the CGIAR research initiative on Gender Equality—measures women’s voice and agency in national-level policymaking in the agrifood sector (Figure 1). Identifying gaps in women’s voice in the agrifood policy process and finding entry points for inclusive participation are crucial to efforts to addressing gender inequities in agrifood systems—and to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

IFPRI researchers employed WEAGov as they joined forces with the African Women in Agricultural Research and Development (AWARD)’s Gender Responsive Agriculture Systems Policy (GRASP) Fellowship Program in a virtual workshop on June 21. More than 150 researchers and fellows from 12 African countries exchanged insights and explored avenues for collaboration that could catalyze gender transformative change in African agrifood policymaking.

Figure 1: WEAGov assessment framework

Source: Kyle and Ragasa (2023).

The GRASP fellowship targets mid-career African women in the policy field—ranging from government ministries, civil society organizations, and academia to help them catalyze the design and implementation of gender-responsive agricultural policies across Africa. The fellowship aims to cultivate a pool of confident and capable African women to lead policy changes to improve African smallholders’ livelihoods.

Each GRASP fellow is paired with a senior professional as a mentor and with a junior professional as a mentee. Each fellow works on a policy innovation project (PIP) that analyzes the ways in which agrifood policies could exacerbate gender gaps in agrifood systems, gender-based constraints to designing solutions to these challenges, and opportunities to promote gender equality and women’s empowerment in agrifood policies. The inaugural cohort of fellows is focusing on subjects including gender analysis of seed and livestock policies, women’s inclusion in value chains, increasing women’s capacity to comply with trade regulations, and other critical policy areas within their respective agrifood sectors. The fellows receive a modest catalytic fund to begin implementing their policy innovation projects.

At the event, the IFPRI team presented three ways that WEAGov could enhance and support fellows’ PIPs. First, the WEAGov conceptual framework (Figure 2) can be used to analyze women’s voice and agency within policymaking in the agrifood sector as a whole or within a specific policy. Where many gender policy analyses focus on the gender content in a policy document, the WEAGov conceptual framework considers gender inclusion within policy implementation and evaluation as well, and evaluates the different ways in which women can be engaged in decision-making—e.g., having their needs and priorities considered, being involved as active agents, and leading in key parts of the policy process. Overall, 77% of workshop participants noted that the conceptual framework would be helpful for their PIPs.

Figure 2: WEAGov conceptual framework

Source: Kyle and Ragasa (2023).

IFPRI researchers also trained workshop participants on the WEAGov methodology and how to measure and score multiple gender dimensions of a national- or state-level agrifood policy process and track progress over time. Finally, IFPRI researchers shared a variety of specific desk review tools, survey instruments, and key informants’ interview guides that fellows could use to apply parts of WEAGov to their projects. READ MORE

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