Inadequate funding hinders
rural women empowerment in Ghana
Audrey Micah, Ghanadot
Accra, April 22, Ghanadot - For
many years, seminars and workshops have been organised all
in the name of empowering Ghanaian women, but their actual
implementation has unfortunately been tardy. Either,
implementing institutions pay lip service to start a
programme or resource allocation are too inadequate to check
desired effects of the programme.
There is a genuine and strong need to constitute
implementation committees whose only job would be to monitor
the level of progress and take appropriate remedial measures
to ensure that the programme achieve its targets. In other
words, opportunities do exist to empower rural women, there
is a need to translate them into effective action.
Another important challenge that rural women face during
empowerment process is the urgency to devise innovative and
impregnable mechanisms as conventional strategies have
miserably failed to deliver results. While devising
innovative strategies, views of menfolk should be flexibly
accommodated so that strategies become much more effective,
if not fool proof.
Many use the term empowerment
without understanding what it really means. A literature
review resulted in no clear definition of the concept,
especially one that could cross-disciplinary lines.
This article defines empowerment as a multi-dimensional
social process that helps people gain control over their own
lives. It is a process that fosters power in people for use
in their own lives, their communities and in their society,
by acting on issues they define as important.
In fact, economic and political factors are the crucial keys
to empower rural women. Both these factors of power if put
together have the potential to transform the conditions of
rural women beyond conventional thinking.
To empower them economically, there is a need to take
affirmative action to further develop their skills,
capacities and productivity as well as enforce gender
sensitive laws and policies to protect their rights in the
labour force.
Legal protection should also be provided to women in
ownership of land so that women could become independent to
chart out their own strategy in agricultural production. Aso,
to empower them politically, there is a need to create
special funds for women for political campaign as well as
give them training on political and legal rights.
Similarly, in schools and colleges, knowledge of political
rights should be imparted and made part of the curriculum
and at the same time, periodic elections should be held
where students should participate and learn political
processes. Important of all, legislation should be enacted
to reserve seats for women in national legislative assembly.
Their involvement in the apex level decision making body
would surely help to achieve the targets.
Closely associated with economic-political factors are
social and cultural conditions that reinforce to negate the
advancement of rural women. Inability of rural women to
question conventional wisdom has perpetuated men’s
domination in the patriarchal society.
The effective solution to this challenge lies in educating
rural women. An educated woman can arguably challenge social
dogmas and assert their position. Here again, an innovative
approach is needed to convert this potential human resource
into a development tool.
Minister for Women and Children's Affairs, Ms Sena Akua
Dansuah has stated when Ghanadot called on her that her
ministry will promote the welfare of women and children in
Ghana, and also ensure equal status for women and promote
rights of children.
Ms. Dansuah said the Ministry of Women and Children's
Affairs has prepare a National Development plan and
programmes for women and children in which all the desired
objectives and functions of the Ministry are programmed for
implementation.
She assured that her ministry will ensure that development
programmes for women are effectively implemented, through
continuous monitoring and evaluation of the implementation
process, making sure stipulated objectives are fulfilled.
Hon. Akua Dansua pointed out that women and children’s
issues played a pivotal role in government’s agenda, adding
that things will be different in her ministry as she will do
everything possible to ensure that women are given the
support to be able to stand on their own.
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