Promoting women’s empowerment through access to electricity : a case study of the mini-grid project in a rural village in Myanmar
(2020) MIDM19 20201Department of Human Geography
LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management
- Abstract
- Men and women have different energy needs, and the lack of access to electricity could be negatively affecting women more than men by reason of women’s typical gender norms in a society. However, previous studies and projects’ approach rarely recognize the gender dimension on energy. The aim of this thesis is to explore how access to reliable electricity though National Electrification Project’s mini-grid project has promoted women’s empowerment in a rural village, Myanmar on the basis of gender needs: practical, productive and strategic needs. A qualitative case study approach was conducted with semi-structured interviews. The principle findings show clear benefits of meeting practical and productive gender needs by reducing women’s... (More)
- Men and women have different energy needs, and the lack of access to electricity could be negatively affecting women more than men by reason of women’s typical gender norms in a society. However, previous studies and projects’ approach rarely recognize the gender dimension on energy. The aim of this thesis is to explore how access to reliable electricity though National Electrification Project’s mini-grid project has promoted women’s empowerment in a rural village, Myanmar on the basis of gender needs: practical, productive and strategic needs. A qualitative case study approach was conducted with semi-structured interviews. The principle findings show clear benefits of meeting practical and productive gender needs by reducing women’s household chores and promoting new income generating activities for access to electricity. But there was limited evidence on meeting strategic gender needs, which are deeply connected to empowering women. However, what can be seen in this rural village could be identified as a bottom-up process where women tried to find gender needs to promote living in a better situation by themselves. Since women’s empowerment is hard to measure in a short-term, thus, there might be a possibility of positive impacts of women’s empowerment in a long-term for rural women. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9025840
- author
- Lee, Soon Yeob LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- MIDM19 20201
- year
- 2020
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- Energy, Electricity, Gender Equality, Empowerment, Gender Needs, Mini-grid, NEP, Myanmar
- language
- English
- id
- 9025840
- date added to LUP
- 2020-09-08 11:34:38
- date last changed
- 2020-09-08 11:34:38
@misc{9025840, abstract = {{Men and women have different energy needs, and the lack of access to electricity could be negatively affecting women more than men by reason of women’s typical gender norms in a society. However, previous studies and projects’ approach rarely recognize the gender dimension on energy. The aim of this thesis is to explore how access to reliable electricity though National Electrification Project’s mini-grid project has promoted women’s empowerment in a rural village, Myanmar on the basis of gender needs: practical, productive and strategic needs. A qualitative case study approach was conducted with semi-structured interviews. The principle findings show clear benefits of meeting practical and productive gender needs by reducing women’s household chores and promoting new income generating activities for access to electricity. But there was limited evidence on meeting strategic gender needs, which are deeply connected to empowering women. However, what can be seen in this rural village could be identified as a bottom-up process where women tried to find gender needs to promote living in a better situation by themselves. Since women’s empowerment is hard to measure in a short-term, thus, there might be a possibility of positive impacts of women’s empowerment in a long-term for rural women.}}, author = {{Lee, Soon Yeob}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Promoting women’s empowerment through access to electricity : a case study of the mini-grid project in a rural village in Myanmar}}, year = {{2020}}, }