discussion paper

Development of a Women’s Empowerment metric for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WE-WASH)

by Jessica Heckert,
Kalyani Raghunathan,
Emily Myers,
Gayathri V. Ramani,
Simone Faas,
Nathaniel Ferguson,
Greg Seymour,
Hazel J. Malapit,
Flor Paz,
Febbie Chiwasa,
Joan Chilalika,
Jean Kamwaba-Mtethiwa,
Gowokani Chijere Chirwa,
Abigail Simkoko,
Abdallah Chilungo,
Rachana Upadhyaya,
Meeta S. Pradhan,
Nira Joshi and
Sanish Shrestha
Open Access
Citation
Heckert, Jessica; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Myers, Emily; Ramani, Gayathri V.; Faas, Simone; Ferguson, Nathaniel; et al. 2023. Development of a Women’s Empowerment metric for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WE-WASH). IFPRI Discussion Paper 2207. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.137008

There is a growing focus on gender-sensitive approaches and women’s empowerment in the water, sanitation, and hygiene sectors. At the same time, there is a lack of metrics to measure women’s empowerment in the WASH sector. Such metrics are important for understanding the types of programmatic interventions that are most needed for addressing women’s empowerment, as well as for assessing their impacts on women’s empowerment. In this report, we describe the development of a Women’s Empowerment metrics for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WE-WASH). We collected data from individual women and men in 812 households in Malawi and 826 households in Nepal. Using the data, we develop 14 indicators and establish cutoff thresholds (i.e., whether the individual is empowered) in the areas of intrinsic, instrumental, and collective agency in WASH; instrumental and intrinsic agency in menstrual hygiene management; and the empowerment environment (or resources for empowerment). In each country, we observe differences in empowerment levels between women and men, that favor men on most outcomes. Notably, in both countries, we find that women are much less likely than men to contribute to WASH infrastructure decisions, and most women are spending an undue amount of time contributing to WASH-related labor. In Nepal especially, agency related to menstrual hygiene management is also a substantial area of disempowerment for women.