Authors
Andrew Beath, Fotini Christia, Ruben Enikolopov
Publication date
2013/8
Journal
American Political Science Review
Volume
107
Issue
3
Pages
540-557
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
In societies with widespread gender discrimination, development programs with gender quotas are considered a way to improve women's economic, political, and social status. Using a randomized field experiment across 500 Afghan villages, we examine the effects of a development program that mandates female participation. We find that even in a highly conservative context like Afghanistan, such initiatives improve outcomes specific to female participation in some economic, social, and political activities, including increased mobility and income generation. They, however, produce no change in more entrenched female roles linked to family decision-making or in attitudes toward the general role of women in society.
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