Gender Experiments in Peru

Gender equality has become an integral part of policies in poor developing countries. The perspective of women's rights as a human right not to be refuted by culture or political majority decision-making is rather new. In addition to being an aim in itself, gender equality seems to increase eco...

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Main Author: Wiig, Henrik
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9116
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spelling okr-10986-91162021-04-23T14:02:44Z Gender Experiments in Peru Wiig, Henrik World Development Report 2012 Gender equality has become an integral part of policies in poor developing countries. The perspective of women's rights as a human right not to be refuted by culture or political majority decision-making is rather new. In addition to being an aim in itself, gender equality seems to increase economic productivity through changing household resource allocation. A growing empirical literature shows more development and improved wellbeing in households with influential women (Godoy et al. 2006). National and international policies in developing countries have hence started to explicitly favor women at the cost of men, e.g. family support cash transfer programs that are paid only to women, additional investments in female schooling and explicit priority of women in public policies and laws. 2012-06-26T15:38:51Z 2012-06-26T15:38:51Z 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9116 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Latin America & Caribbean Peru
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic World Development Report 2012
spellingShingle World Development Report 2012
Wiig, Henrik
Gender Experiments in Peru
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Peru
description Gender equality has become an integral part of policies in poor developing countries. The perspective of women's rights as a human right not to be refuted by culture or political majority decision-making is rather new. In addition to being an aim in itself, gender equality seems to increase economic productivity through changing household resource allocation. A growing empirical literature shows more development and improved wellbeing in households with influential women (Godoy et al. 2006). National and international policies in developing countries have hence started to explicitly favor women at the cost of men, e.g. family support cash transfer programs that are paid only to women, additional investments in female schooling and explicit priority of women in public policies and laws.
author Wiig, Henrik
author_facet Wiig, Henrik
author_sort Wiig, Henrik
title Gender Experiments in Peru
title_short Gender Experiments in Peru
title_full Gender Experiments in Peru
title_fullStr Gender Experiments in Peru
title_full_unstemmed Gender Experiments in Peru
title_sort gender experiments in peru
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9116
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