Emerging Issues

Innovation to Empower Women

Innovation for Women’s Empowerment and Gender Equality

ICRW experts have begun to examine how creative ideas intersect with women’s economic, social and personal development. Including women in innovative pursuits can produce fundamentally deeper benefits. Innovation can catalyze change and help dramatically shift persistent inequalities between them and men. It also can arm women with the ability to recognize new opportunities and the confidence to dive into them.

Emerging Issues

Catalyze Change

In today's world, new ideas, practices and solutions to address global problems emerge constantly. Dynamic trends in technologies, economies and societies can catalyze change in powerful ways.

Women in Spotlight at Clinton Global Initiative

ICRW, ExxonMobil and Ashoka Announce Commitment
Wed, 09/30/2009

The International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) shared the stage last week with former President Bill Clinton at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), which included an unprecedented focus on investing in women and girls.

The International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) shared the stage last week with former President Bill Clinton at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), which included an unprecedented focus on investing in women and girls.

CGI, dubbed by some as the "Oscars of philanthropy," brings together nongovernmental organizations, private companies and global leaders to address the world’s most pressing problems.

President Clinton called the vital role of women an important addition to CGI’s agenda. "Whether the issue is improving the involvement of young women and girls in education to climate change and all political, economic and social issues in between…" he said, "empowering women is central to what the world has to do in the 21st century."

In an opening plenary, a diverse panel from public, private and grassroots organizations discussed how programs that invested in women and girls were having an impact. ICRW submitted a question via YouTube asking how the world could use cutting-edge innovations to improve the lives of women in the developing world. The videoed question was the first one shown during the plenary.

CGI also announced new initiatives or “commitments to action” that aim to help the most vulnerable. Several commitments to invest in women and girls were revealed, including one involving ICRW, ExxonMobil and AshokaChangemakers that will use technology and innovation to help women in developing countries become more economically stable. As part of the commitment, ICRW will produce new research on areas where technological innovation can advance women’s economic productivity.

"This effort will address a critical barrier to women’s economic participation and have a significant impact on boosting women’s economic activity and productivity," ICRW President Geeta Rao Gupta said.

Rao Gupta – who served as an informal adviser to CGI on its women’s track – also moderated a workshop focused on how best to create public-private partnerships that would open up opportunities for women and girls to have equal access to education, health care, jobs and the political arena. Nearly 100 people attended the session originally reserved for 50, including representatives from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Pakistan National Forum on Women’s Health and the U.S. Department of State.

Gillian Gaynair is ICRW's writer/editor.


 

ExxonMobil, Ashoka Changemakers, and ICRW Launch Women's Technology Challenge

Thu, 01/28/2010
Fast Company

Armed with new research from the International Center for Research on Women, the ICRW, ExxonMobil, and Ashoka Changemakers are launching a new economic development challenge that they believe will be transformative in improving the lives of women and their families in developing countries.

Pioneering ICRW Study Analyzes How Innovations Can Improve Poor Women’s Lives

Wed, 09/23/2009

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Poor women’s lives can dramatically improve when they are included in creative, breakthrough concepts and practices, according to new findings by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW).

ICRW’s first-ever scholarly assessment of innovations that transformed women’s lives will help guide a new ExxonMobil effort announced today at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) in New York. ExxonMobil’s program aims to use technology and innovation to improve women’s economic livelihoods.

“Our research shows how cutting-edge ideas can be game changers for the world’s women,” said Anju Malhotra, ICRW vice president of research innovation and impact, and principal author of the study. “Innovations that introduce women to a seemingly simple technology or increase their access to economic opportunities, or shift how society views women’s roles and potential, can transform not only her life, but her nation’s economy.”

Women in developing countries have little access to innovations that could better their social and economic standing – as well as that of their families, communities and countries. But as a growing number of businesses and governments recognize the value of investing in women, there now are more possibilities than ever to include women in innovative opportunities emerging worldwide.

In its groundbreaking analysis, ICRW assessed innovations that transformed women’s lives by using technology, changing social norms and strengthening economic vitality. ICRW identified seven core approaches – or levers – that are essential to create meaningful change for women. They include:

    •    Creating strategic partnerships among governments, the private sector and civil society so that a diversity of resources and networks reach out to women and meaningfully benefit them.
    •    Including women in the design and diffusion stages of innovations so the efforts are shaped in ways that are relevant to women and will meet their needs.
    •    Having committed support from governments as well as efforts at the grassroots level to ensure that innovations generate momentum.

ICRW has found that applying such approaches to innovations is critical to helping women stand on equal footing with their male counterparts and – more importantly – arming them with the confidence and ability to help address the most challenging problems in international development.

“Never before has the world experienced such dynamic change in technologies, economies and societies as it is today,” said Geeta Rao Gupta, ICRW president. “For the first time, through this research, we know how innovation can lift millions of women out of poverty and help them reach their full potential.”

Media Contact: 
Jeannie Bunton, 202.742.1316, Jbunton@icrw.org
Mission Statement: 

ICRW's mission is to empower women, advance gender equality and fight poverty in the developing world. To accomplish this, ICRW works with partners to conduct empirical research, build capacity and advocate for evidence-based, practical ways to change policies and programs.

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