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Theoretical approach The term women and development was originally coined by a
Washington-based network of female development professionals in the early 1970s[3] who sought
to put in question the trickle down theories of development by contesting that modernization had
identical impact on men and women.[4] The Women in Development movement (WID) gained
momentum in the 1970s, driven by the resurgence of women's movement in northern countries,
whereby liberal feminists were striving for equal rights and labour opportunities in the United
States.[5] Liberal feminism, postulating that women's disadvantages in society may be eliminated
by breaking down stereotyped customary expectations of women by offering better education to
women and introducing equal opportunity programmes,[6] had a notable influence on the
formulation of the WID approaches, whereby little attention was given to men and to power
relations between genders.[5]
The translation of the 1970s feminist movements and their repeated calls for employment
opportunities in the development agenda meant that particular attention was given to the
productive labour of women, leaving aside reproductive concerns and social welfare.[5] Yet this
focus was part of the approach pushed forward by advocates of the WID movement, reacting to
the general policy environment maintained by early colonial authorities and post-war
development authorities, wherein inadequate reference to the work undertook by women as
producers was made, as they were almost solely identified as their roles as wives and mothers.[5]
The WID's opposition to this welfare approach was in part motivated by the work of Danish
economist Ester Boserup in the early 1970s, who challenged the assumptions of the said
approach and highlighted the role women by women in the agricultural production and economy.
[7]
A dominant strand of thinking within WID sought to link womens issues with development,
highlighting how such issues acted as impediments to economic growth; this relevance
approach stemmed from the experience of WID advocates which illustrated that it was more
effective if demands of equity and social justice for women were strategically linked to
mainstream development concerns, in an attempt to have WID policy goals taken up by
development agencies.[8] The Women in Development approach was the first contemporary
movement to specifically integrate women in the broader development agenda and acted as the
precursor to later movements such as the Women and Development (WAD), and ultimately, the
Gender and Development approach, departing from some of the criticized aspects imputed to the
WID.
Criticism The WID movement faced a number of criticisms; such an approach had in some
cases the unwanted consequence of depicting women as a unit whose claims are conditional on
its productive value, associating increased female status with the value of cash income in
womens lives.[9] Furthermore, the WID, although it advocated for greater gender equality, did
not tackle the unequal gender relations and roles at the basis of women's exclusion and gender
subordination rather than addressing the stereotyped expectations entertained by men.[10]
Moreover, the underlying assumption behind the call for the integration of the Third World
women with their national economy was that women were not already participating in
development, thus downplaying women's roles in household production and informal economic
and political activities.[11] The WID was also criticized for its views on the fact that women's
status will improve by moving into productive employment, implying that the move to the
modern sector need to be made from the traditional sector to achieve self-advancement,
further implying that traditional work roles often occupied by women in the developing world
were inhibiting to self-development.[12]
Criticism Some of the common critiques of the WAD approach include concerns that the
women-only development projects would struggle, or ultimately fail, due to their scale, and the
marginalized status of these women. Furthermore, the WAD perspective suffers from a tendency
to view women as a class, and pay little attention to the differences among women (such as
feminist concept of intersectionality), including race and ethnicity, and prescribe development
endeavors that may only serve to address the needs of a particular group. While an improvement
on WID, WAD fails to fully consider the relationships between patriarchy, modes of production,
and the marginalization of women. It also presumes that the position of women around the world
will improve when international conditions become more equitable. Additionally, WAD has been
criticized for its singular preoccupation with the productive side of womens work, while it
ignores the reproductive aspect of womens work and lives. Value is placed on incomegenerating activities, and none is ascribed to social and cultural reproduction.[14]
Equality and Human Rights Commission found massive pay inequities in some United
Kingdoms top finance companies, women received around 80 percent less performance-related
pay than their male colleagues.'[28] In reaction to inequalities between gender, Beijing Platform
for Action established gender mainstreaming in 1995 as a strategy across all policy areas at all
levels of governance for achieving gender equality.
Caroline Moser developed the Moser Gender Planning Framework for GAD-oriented
development planning in the 1980s while working at the Development Planning Unit of the
University of London. Working with Caren Levy, she expanded it into a methodology for gender
policy and planning.[29] The Moser framework follows the Gender and Development approach in
emphasizing the importance of gender relations. As with the WID-based Harvard Analytical
Framework, it includes collection of quantitative empirical facts. Going further, it investigates
the reasons and processes that lead to conventions of access and control. The Moser Framework
includes gender roles identification, gender needs assessment, disaggregating control of
resources and decision making withn the household, planning for balancing the triple role,
distinguishing between different aims in interventions and involving women and gender-aware
organizations in planning.[30]
Criticisms GAD has been criticized for emphasizing the social differences between men and
women while neglecting the bonds between them and also the potential for changes in roles.
Another criticism is that GAD does not dig deep enough into social relations and so may not
explain how these relations can undermine programs directed at women. It also does not uncover
the types of trade-off that women are prepared to make for the sake of achieving their ideals of
marriage or motherhood.[25] Another criticism is that GID perspective is theoretical distinct from
WID, but in practice, a program seem to have the element of the two. Whilst many development
agencies are now committed to a gender approach, in practice, the primary institutional
perspective remains as WID.[17] There is a slippage in reality where gender mainstreaming is
often based in a single normative perspective as synonymous to women.[31] Development
agencies still advance gender transformation to mean economic betterment for women.[17]