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Abstract
Ensuring gender equality is an important development challenge, especially in rural areas, where women are often marginalized by economic, socio-cultural and policy structures. Women-Led Social Innovation Initiatives (WLSIIs) are a promising way to address this challenge, but their contributions to gender equality depend on complex interactions between marginalizing structures and agency of women. The objective of this paper is to examine how the relevant elements of agency enable WLSIIs to contribute to progress towards gender equality in rural areas. We examine five WLSIIs located in Canada, Italy, Lebanon, Morocco, and Serbia. The cases focus on employment, education, identity, gender roles, and rural development, and are analyzed by grounded theory. We identified 1) gendered identity, 2) (in)dependence of women, and 3) control of women over the “rules of the game” as structural features that can enable or constrain WLSIIs. These concepts are located between grand societal structures (policy, economy, culture, and social organization) and women’s concrete, everyday realities, and as such helped us to understand factors supporting or hindering women’s agency and well-being. We identified women’s self-confidence, women-to-women networks, and self-developed and externally supported capacity as the key elements enabling agency. All these together increased social acceptance of the examined WLSIIs, helping to overcome cultural prejudices and gendered stereotypes. For example, women-to-women networks and self-organization increased economic independence, which reduced skepticism towards “new” roles of women and even changed unequal political dynamics. We conclude that women’s collective agency can be enabled by WLSIIs in diverse geographical and cultural contexts and should be recognized by policymakers as a key mechanism that has great potential for enhancing gender equality and overcoming structures marginalizing rural women.
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Details
; Ludvig, Alice 2
; Fransala, Jasmiini 3
; Melnykovych, Mariana 4
; Živojinović, Ivana 2
; Ravazzoli, Elisa 5
; Bengoumi, Mohammed 6
; Nijnik, Maria 7
; Cristina Dalla Torre 5
; Górriz-Mifsud, Elena 8
; Labidi, Arbia 6
; Sfeir, Patricia 9
; Lucía López Marco 10
; Valero, Diana 11 ; Joyce, Katy 12
; Chorti, Houda 6 1 University of Oulu, Finland; University of Erfurt, Germany
2 Institute of Forest, Environmental and Natural Resource Policy, BOKU University, Vienna, Austria; European Forest Institute, Forest Policy Research Network, Vienna, Austria; Centre for Bioeconomy, BOKU University, Vienna, Austria
3 University of Oulu, Finland
4 Berne University of Applied Sciences Zollikofen, Switzerland
5 EURAC Research, Bolzano, Italy
6 UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, Tunis, Tunisia
7 The James Hutton Institute Aberdeen, UK
8 The Forest Science and Technology Centre of Catalonia
9 SEEDS-Int., Horsh Tabet, Lebanon
10 Mediterranean Agronomic Institute, Zaragoza, Spain
11 James Hutton Institute Aberdeen, UK
12 James Hutton Institute Aberdeen, UK; Anglia Ruskin University, UK




