Let's keep setting the gender agenda to #PressforProgress
On International Women's Day, read here how we together press for progress across global supply chains.
In the past months, movements such as #MeToo and #TimesUp have catapulted gender issues into the spotlight. Building on that momentum, the theme for International Women’s Day 2018 is #PressForProgress — and we’re proud to share with you, as a partner in our projects, how you’re helping us do exactly that across global supply chains.
With your support in our gender projects, we’ve been able to reflect on our approach to gender and work to strengthen our proposition for change: we recognize that gender is not an isolated theme for action, but a lens to be applied on all our interventions and impact issues.
We’ve helped #PressForProgress this year by putting together some compelling arguments for supply chain partners to invest in gender equality and outlining possible steps to move these projects further.
- Businesses change their practices to ensure more equal decision-making in the household and/or workplace - 50.000 farmer households are empowered
- Enhance gender awareness (incl. on gender based violence) resulting in improved gender balance, improved safety, and a happy workforce - improved gender balance for 100,000 farmers/workers
Cultivating gender equality - a case study in the Ethiopian floriculture sector
In the Ethiopian horticulture, young women dominate the workforce, with more than 85% of employees being female and the majority being between the ages of 18-25. In 2015, EHPEA, the Ethiopian Horticulture Producers Exporters Association, benefited from our co-funding to implement a women’s empowerment program together with BSR (Business for Social Responsibility).
Learnings from the pilot phase has showed that lasting improvement of (women) workers’ health and welfare status requires a “change in mind set” at the farm level. Building upon the first successes, EHPEA was presented in 2016 with the opportunity to scale up and adapt the program to ensure its sustainability and ability for the farms to continue including its components in their long-term daily management practices. We agreed to co-fund the second phase of the project, which still see EHPEA collaborating with BSR, with the ambition to increase the health and gender knowledge, behavior, and access of 20,000 general workers of target farms; and to improve the practices, policies, and procedures of 42 farms to support gender sensitive management, prevention of harassment, and worker welfare.
Click here to see the results reached by December 2017