posted on 2024-09-05, 23:16authored bySohela Nazneen, Naomi Hossain, Maheen Sultan
As Bangladesh turns 40, improvements in women’s wellbeing and increased agency are claimed to be some of the most significant gains in the post-independence era. Various
economic and social development indicators show that in the last 20 years, Bangladesh, a
poor, Muslim-majority country in the classic patriarchal belt, has made substantial progress in
increasing women’s access to education and healthcare (including increasing lifeexpectancy),
and in improving women’s participation in the labour force. The actors
implementing such programmes and policies and claiming to promote women’s
empowerment are numerous, and they occupy a significant position within national political
traditions and development discourses. In the 1970s and 1980s development ideas around
women’s empowerment in Bangladesh were influenced by an overtly instrumentalist logic
within the international donor sphere. This led to the women’s empowerment agenda being
perceived as a donor driven project, which overlooks how domestic actors such as political
parties, women’s organisations and national NGOs have influenced thinking and action
around it.
This paper explores how these perceptions and narratives around women’s empowerment
have evolved in Bangladesh from 2000 to date. It studies the concepts of women’s
empowerment in public discourse and reviews the meanings and uses of the term by
selected women’s organisations, donor agencies, political parties and development NGOs.
By reviewing the publicly available documents of these organisations, the paper analyses the
multiple discourses on women’s empowerment, showing the different concepts associated
with it and how notions such as power, domains and processes of empowerment are
understood by these actors. It also highlights how these different discourses have influenced
each other and where they have diverged, with an emphasis on what these divergences
mean in terms of advancing women’s interests in Bangladesh.
Keywords: Bangladesh; women’s empowerment; NGOs; political parties; women’s
movement; international aid agencies.
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Nazneen, S., N. Hossain & M. Sultan (2011) National discourses on women's empowerment in Bangladesh : continuities and change. Working paper series, 368. Brighton: IDS.