Women’s participation in decision making may not mean they are truly empowered.
By Sahara Basnet
Women are active users of forests, when it comes to the collection of forestry products for daily household use. Although the primary users, women have long been denied a seat on the decision-making table when it comes to determining the proper use of the forest. Historically, due to the patriarchal structure of society, minimal attention was paid to poor and marginalised communities, including women. However, the use of community forests has set out to change that by adopting policies that transformed the role of women from passive receivers of the decision to active decision-makers. This has resulted in many women, especially in rural Nepal, being able to actively participate in decision making. However, does the elevation of women to decision making roles mean that they are truly empowered?
The community forest programme, which started in the 1980s, is one of the most successful models for the conservation of forests in Nepal. A community forest is a method of preserving forests through the decentralisation of power to the local people around the forest area. The crucial aspect of this method is the participation of local communities to create specific guidelines to determine the use of the forest. Nearly
Newfound power
Nepal is a party to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. The impact of signing such treaties is reflected especially in the forestry sector. The Ninth Five-Year National Development Plan (1997-2002) formally recognised women as the primary users of community forests. The Forestry Sector Master Plan (1988) was the key plan which developed Nepal's forest sector by requiring that women make up 50 percent of the executive committee in all Community Forest User Groups. Simultaneously, it was mandated that in all households, one man and one woman must be on the list of members of the community forest in the area. Although these policies successfully brought Nepali women to the decision-making table, are the women able to fully exercise this newfound power? Perhaps not, and the reason being rigid gender relations.
Out of the
These two examples are only a few of many others that internally foster gender-based discrimination. Women-only user groups receive forests that are in much worse condition than those allocated to mixed user groups. Studies reveal that around
Gender distinct policies
Prominent feminist author Naila Kabeer defines
Statistically, women-only forest user groups are in high number, showcasing that women leadership and management is advancing in rural Nepal. Nevertheless, such improvements can turn into a tokenistic approach, as a closer look reveals that gender relations still prevent women from receiving equal treatment. Though visible legal power may exist for women in the community forest sector, their participation hasn’t fully resulted in empowerment. While the positive legal changes should be celebrated; we must learn to measure empowerment beyond simply participation if we want the policies created for women to fully cater to them.
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Related to SDG 5: Gender equality