SOURCE: Thomson Reuters Foundation
As the U.N. International Day of Rural Women on Oct. 15 spotlights the key role women play in the dynamic economies of the developing world, you may see some striking statistics and platitudes on the topic. These are meant to highlight the inequality and discrimination rural women around the world face, and inspire us to recommit to advancing their rights and agency.
There's just one problem: many factoids about the noble struggles of rural women in developing countries aren't true.
These widely circulated myths do contain a kernel of truth: in general, rural women work hard, with fewer resources at their disposition than men. But despite the good intentions behind them, they promote stereotypes of women as either victims or saviours, and hinder the design and implementation of programmes that can concretely advance women's opportunities on the ground.
Here are three common myths about rural women around the world:
1. Women produce 60 to 80 percent of the world's food
Women are indeed important producers of food who are frequently undercounted in agricultural labour statistics. Though men and women often have different farming tasks (sometimes producing different products within the same household) they also often work together, so neither labour nor food production can be easily measured by gender. For example, if a husband ploughs, a woman weeds, both harvest, and the woman sells, how much of the resulting harvest did each produce?
2. Women own 1 percent of the world's land
3. Women are better stewards of the environment
Because of women's traditional roles gathering firewood, collecting water, and managing agriculture, ecological degradation, and climate change hit them disproportionately. So they do have incentives to conserve resources. But the picture is more complicated. Other factors also influence conservation behaviour, such as land rights, and access to information, capital, and enforcement power. Women are less likely to have those resources
Believing women are the linchpin of conservation leaves them shouldering too great a burden. Often, they're sidelined in community-level decision-making about natural resources. Conservation efforts that involve both men and women tend to be more successful: in Bangladesh, compliance with rules regulating fishing in protected areas is better when both men and women are involved in fishery management groups.
The persistence of these myths helps to embellish an image of the rural woman as a victim instead of an agent of change. A close look at the evidence shows that rural women are farmers and entrepreneurs, investors, and partners with men. Governments and international organisations must design programmes and policies that fit the realities, not the myths.