Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia
The DGM Indonesia (DGM-I) country project focuses on improving clarity and security of land rights for Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs), as well as improving livelihood opportunities from sustainable forests and land. In implementat...
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Format: | Country Gender Assessment |
Language: | English |
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2022
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099235203102223831/P171847099e9b107c09b4702ec56c61c14e http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37183 |
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okr-10986-371832022-03-23T05:10:50Z Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia Canpolat, Ezgi Shakirova, Meerim McElhinny, Vince Westerman, Kame Cruz, Alli Buppert, Theresa GENDER TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE LAND RIGHTS SUSTAINABLE FOREST CAPACITY BUILDING WOMEN'S ECONOMIC ACHIEVEMENT ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT WOMEN'S EQUALITY UNEQUAL LAWS The DGM Indonesia (DGM-I) country project focuses on improving clarity and security of land rights for Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs), as well as improving livelihood opportunities from sustainable forests and land. In implementation since March 2017, with 63 subprojects either in implementation or completed, there are ample opportunities for detailed examination of a particular DGM-I subproject. This can offer insight into whether and how DGM projects are influencing women’s participation and leadership on the ground, and can also provide an indication of the extent to which the project may be influencing broader social and gender norms in Indonesia. In turn, this case study informs the wider line of inquiry of the World Bank DGM & REDD+ Gender Study, which follows a conceptual framework of gender transformative change to analyze the contribution the DGM-I project is making to women's economic achievement, access to and control over productive assets, voice, and agency that support positive changes in women’s leadership and meaningful participation. The conceptual framework for this study follows a stepwise, yet flexible and dynamic, progression toward gender transformative change. The framework begins by assessing the inputs that the DGM project provides to beneficiaries, such as assets, information, skills, and capacity building. This assessment looks at what types of inputs are provided, as well as to whom and how they are provided. Next, we assess through the framework how those inputs have influenced women’s income and assets, and building on that, how women are gaining voice and agency. Next, we assess whether and how those changes in voice and agency are influencing gender norms, attitudes, and perceptions of women and men at multiple levels, from individual to household to community. Finally, we look at whether those shifts have the potential to be sustained beyond the lifetime of the project and influence more formal practices, rules, policies, and laws that treat women in an unequal way. 2022-03-22T15:09:33Z 2022-03-22T15:09:33Z 2022 Country Gender Assessment http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099235203102223831/P171847099e9b107c09b4702ec56c61c14e http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37183 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Report Publications & Research South Asia Indonesia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
GENDER TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE LAND RIGHTS SUSTAINABLE FOREST CAPACITY BUILDING WOMEN'S ECONOMIC ACHIEVEMENT ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT WOMEN'S EQUALITY UNEQUAL LAWS |
spellingShingle |
GENDER TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE LAND RIGHTS SUSTAINABLE FOREST CAPACITY BUILDING WOMEN'S ECONOMIC ACHIEVEMENT ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT WOMEN'S EQUALITY UNEQUAL LAWS Canpolat, Ezgi Shakirova, Meerim McElhinny, Vince Westerman, Kame Cruz, Alli Buppert, Theresa Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
geographic_facet |
South Asia Indonesia |
description |
The DGM Indonesia (DGM-I) country
project focuses on improving clarity and security of land
rights for Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs),
as well as improving livelihood opportunities from
sustainable forests and land. In implementation since March
2017, with 63 subprojects either in implementation or
completed, there are ample opportunities for detailed
examination of a particular DGM-I subproject. This can offer
insight into whether and how DGM projects are influencing
women’s participation and leadership on the ground, and can
also provide an indication of the extent to which the
project may be influencing broader social and gender norms
in Indonesia. In turn, this case study informs the wider
line of inquiry of the World Bank DGM & REDD+ Gender
Study, which follows a conceptual framework of gender
transformative change to analyze the contribution the DGM-I
project is making to women's economic achievement,
access to and control over productive assets, voice, and
agency that support positive changes in women’s leadership
and meaningful participation. The conceptual framework for
this study follows a stepwise, yet flexible and dynamic,
progression toward gender transformative change. The
framework begins by assessing the inputs that the DGM
project provides to beneficiaries, such as assets,
information, skills, and capacity building. This assessment
looks at what types of inputs are provided, as well as to
whom and how they are provided. Next, we assess through the
framework how those inputs have influenced women’s income
and assets, and building on that, how women are gaining
voice and agency. Next, we assess whether and how those
changes in voice and agency are influencing gender norms,
attitudes, and perceptions of women and men at multiple
levels, from individual to household to community. Finally,
we look at whether those shifts have the potential to be
sustained beyond the lifetime of the project and influence
more formal practices, rules, policies, and laws that treat
women in an unequal way. |
format |
Country Gender Assessment |
author |
Canpolat, Ezgi Shakirova, Meerim McElhinny, Vince Westerman, Kame Cruz, Alli Buppert, Theresa |
author_facet |
Canpolat, Ezgi Shakirova, Meerim McElhinny, Vince Westerman, Kame Cruz, Alli Buppert, Theresa |
author_sort |
Canpolat, Ezgi |
title |
Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
title_short |
Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
title_full |
Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
title_fullStr |
Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fostering Gender-Transformative Change in Sustainable Forest Management : A Case Study of DGM Indonesia |
title_sort |
fostering gender-transformative change in sustainable forest management : a case study of dgm indonesia |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099235203102223831/P171847099e9b107c09b4702ec56c61c14e http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37183 |
_version_ |
1764486681535184896 |