Abstract

Latin-American coffee production has largely relegated women to specific family labor tasks, such as berry picking or cooking. But recent years have seen an increasing number of interventions to empower women in the agricultural sector, including coffee. As a contribution to the growing literature on women's empowerment in agriculture, this article draws on a randomized-controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate a gender empowerment project among coffee producers in Honduras. Previous RCT evaluations of gender empowerment interventions have focused on average treatment effects and paid less attention to the diversity of responses in the sample. This article evaluates the effect of a project to empower women in Honduras' coffee sector but pays attention to how the intervention interacted with the amount of land owned by women to produce different outcomes. The intervention consisted of 12 workshops offered to families in 10 coffee-producing groups. The baseline and end-line surveys (2016–2018) included a sample of 88 families (41 intervention and 47 control, from 4 to 5 communities respectively). Results showed limited effects of the intervention on women's empowerment for the pooled sample, but it found heterogeneous positive effects for land-owning women. Women who owned land and received the treatment scored fewer points on a deprivation score, had input over more decisions related to the use of household income, and were more satisfied with their leisure time. For quantity of land owned, this article also found positive heterogeneous effects for the same variables, and additionally for confidence speaking in public. Results suggest that projects to empower women might benefit from a more nuanced approach to the heterogeneity within the target population.

Highlights

  • Smallholder agriculture in Latin America is mostly controlled by men

  • Results from this study showed limited effects of the intervention on women’s empowerment in agriculture for the pooled sample of women but found heterogeneous positive effects of the project for women owning land and the quantity of land owned

  • This section discusses some possible explanations for the findings from the randomized-controlled trial (RCT), complemented by evidence from the qualitative analysis and revised literature

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Summary

Introduction

Though it is well documented that women have an important role during the entire production cycle. For Honduras, about 50% of all labor in coffee farms comes from women (Álvarez, 2018). Women provide a large share of labor in coffee production, they have almost no power over agricultural decisions and use of income within the household (Lyon et al, 2010). This article uses the following definition: “the expansion in women’s ability to make strategic life choices in a context where this ability was previously denied to them.”. These choices have three inter-related dimensions: resources, agency, and achievements (Kabeer, 1999). Access to resources and assets (as used in most of the cited literature and in this article) are a useful proxy to measure agency (Alsop et al, 2006)

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