Development Works Number 8, October 2013 | Page 4

Women with Skills Spur Economic Development André Roussel/USAID All over the world, we can find models that illustrate various strategies women have used to enter and succeed in fields that their communities still consider “nontraditional.” For example, a growing number of rural women— largely from an older generation and with limited formal education—are working as solar engineers after a six-month training program at Barefoot College in India’s Rajasthan state. Participants in the training program come from remote areas where conventional electricity has never been readily available. Program coordinators have found that these women are more likely than men to return to their communities to work and to share their knowledge with others. This is because the accepted applicants are deeply involved in local life. The solar engineering classroom at Barefoot College illustrates the college’s guiding principle: solutions to rural The Ambassadors Girls Scholarship Program (AGSP) puts a smile on Rachida Moussa, right, and her mentor, Madame Bernadette Ouinin Mora. The program provides meals and mentors to help keep Benin’s poorest girls in school. 4 World Bank/Arne Hoel problems lie within the community. Program advisor Anu Saxena described the scene one morning: “30 participants, from various countries, sit side by side on benches, working with concentration to connect w ires on a circuit board, assemble a solar lantern, or draw what they have just created in a small notebook. “A short distance from the classroom, two impressivelooking 2.5-square-meter parabolic solar cookers glisten in the sunlight. The cookers are attended by Shahnaz and Sita, two Barefoot Solar Engineers.” Both women specialize in the production of cookers, traditionally a male task since it involves metal work and welding. They are now training other women to make the cookers. Villages that have switched to solar power have reduced environmental pollution and forest degradation, and enabled women to do income-generating work and students to study after sundown. As women become leaders in environmental management, they also gain more influence in local politics. In some countries, Barefoot College alumni have started women’s associations—for example, the Solar Warriors of Bhutan. There are many other examples that illustrate our point—that women from impoverished backgrounds are often motivated students who quickly acquire skills that enable them to contribute fully to their country’s economic development. Here are two brief stories from Latin America. In Brazil, Zenaide Pereira da Silva is the first woman at the Santo Antonio hydroelectric dam to operate a gantry crane, a 20-meter-high crane that assembles the turbines necessary to construct a hydropower station. A 29-yearold single parent, Zenaide is earning about three times the country’s minimum monthly wage—income that is needed to support and educate her daughter. In Chile, as recently as 2000, women were simply not allowed in copper mines because of superstitions. Now, more than 7 percent of the industry workforce is female, and this proportion is rising quickly. As machinery operators, many are earning five times as much as in their previous jobs, according to Andres Leon, human resources manager at El Teniente mine. El Teniente is part of the largest copper producer in the world, CODELCO. Ambassador Melanne Verveer emphasizes that hard data support the argument that the world cannot possibly end hunger and extreme poverty without the full participation of women. The numbers show that countries where men and women are closer to equality in areas such as education and political participation are far better off economically. U.S. development assistance programs that integrate women fully help partner countries move closer to the improved economic prospects that come with 100 percent participation in economic development. too common, all over the world. Instead of a list of statistics, here we’ll give a brief example of a creative response. Women in Cities International promotes women’s safety in four major cities (in India, Tanzania, Argentina, and Russia). In 2009, the organization started a “gender inclusive cities” program that engages women and girls in creating safer cities. In order to protect women’s rights in an urban context, the program targets the circumstances that make women vulnerable and gets local communities involved in changing conditions in public spaces.