Value Chain Interventions For Improving Women's Economic Empowerment: A Mixed‐Methods Systematic Review And Meta‐Analysis.
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Wiley - Campbell Collaboration
Abstract
Background: Value chain interventions have become widespread throughout the
international development sector over the last 20 years, and there is a need to
evaluate their effectiveness in improving women's welfare across multiple
dimensions. Agricultural value chains are influenced by socio‐cultural norms and
gender dynamics that have an impact on the distribution of resources, benefits, and
access to opportunities. While women play a critical role in agriculture, they are
generally confined to the least‐valued parts of the value chain with the lowest
economic returns, depending on the local, social and institutional contexts.
Objectives: The review assesses the effectiveness of approaches, strategies and
interventions focused on women's engagement in agricultural value chains that lead
to women's economic empowerment in low‐ and middle‐income countries. It
explores the contextual barriers and facilitators that determine women's participa tion in value chains and ultimately impact their effectiveness.
Search Methods: We searched completed and on‐going studies from Scopus, Web
of Science Core Collection (Social Sciences Citation Index [SSCI], Science Citation
Index Expanded [SCI‐EXPANDED], Conference Proceedings Citation Index –
Science [CPCI‐S], Conference Proceedings Citation Index – Social Science &
Humanities [CPCI‐SSH], and Emerging Sources Citation Index [ESCI]), International
Bibliography of the Social Sciences, EconLit, Business Source Premier, APA PsycInfo,
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane, Database of Systematic
Reviews, CAB Abstracts and Sociological Abstracts. We also searched relevant
websites such as Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers (CGIAR);
the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD); AgriProFocus; the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF); Donor Committee for Enterprise Development;
the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO); the International Labour
Organisation (ILO); the Netherlands Development Organisation; USAID; the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation; the International Food Policy Research
Institute; World Agroforestry; the International Livestock Research Institute; the
Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office; the British Library for Development
Studies (BLDS); AGRIS; the IMMANA grant database; the 3ie impact evaluation
database; Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA); The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty
Action Lab (J‐PAL); the World Bank IEG evaluations; the USAID Development Data
Library; Experience Clearinghouse; the proceedings of the Agriculture, Nutrition and
Health Academy conference; the proceedings of the Centre for the Study of African
Economies (CSAE) Conference; the proceedings of the North East Universities
Development Consortium (NEUDC) Conference; and the World Bank Economic
Review. The database search was conducted in March 2022, and the website search
was completed in August 2022.
Selection Criteria: The review includes value chain interventions evaluating the
economic empowerment outcomes. The review includes effectiveness studies (experi mental and non‐experimental studies with a comparison group) and process evaluations.
Data Collection and Analysis: Two review authors independently assessed studies
for inclusion, extracted data, critically appraised the studies, and synthesised
findings.
Results: We found that value chain interventions are successful in improving the
economic conditions of their intended beneficiaries. The interventions were found
to improve women's economic outcomes such as income, assets holdings,
productivity, and savings, but these effects were small in size and limited by low
confidence in methodological quality. The meta‐analysis suggests that this occurs
more via the acquisition of skills and improved inputs, rather than through
improvement in access to profitable markets. The qualitative evidence on
interventions points to the persistence of cultural barriers and other constraints.
Those interventions implemented in Sub‐Saharan Africa and South Asia are
consistently more successful for all outcomes considered, although there are few
studies conducted in other areas of the world. Conclusions: The review concludes that value chain interventions empower women,
but perhaps to a lesser extent than expected. Economic empowerment does not
immediately translate into empowerment within families and communities.
Interventions should either moderate their expectations of empowerment goals, or
they should be implemented in a way that ensures higher rates of participation
among women and the acquisition of greater decision‐making power.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Malhotra, S. K., Mantri, S., Gupta, N., Bhandari, R., Armah, R. N., Alhassan, H., ... & Masset, E. (2024). Value chain interventions for improving women's economic empowerment: A mixed‐methods systematic review and meta‐analysis. Campbell Systematic Reviews, 20(3), e1428.
