Report

Leveraging Voluntary Sustainability Standards for Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment in Agriculture: A Guide for Development Organizations Based on the Sustainable Development Goals

Our report, available in English and French, explains how voluntary sustainability standards (VSSs) can be used as a tool to meet the SDGs and targets related to gender equality and women’s empowerment in agriculture.

By Kathleen Sexsmith on March 19, 2019

Key Messages

  • Voluntary sustainability standards (VSSs) can contribute indirectly to household food security and gender equality in food access through sustainable production practices that contribute to a diverse and nutritional diet, and by potentially contributing to higher incomes generated from certification.
  • Financial supports provided through certification, such as pre-financing or premiums, can contribute to women’s ability to access productive inputs and credit, when producer organizations support these measures enhancing women’s rights to productive agricultures resources.
  • Certification through VSSs can alleviate some of women’s domestic labour burdens through financial support for labour-saving investments, equipment and technologies.

Systemic gender inequalities and the disempowerment of women persist in agricultural production across the Global South.

For instance, rural households face significant food security concerns, and women and girls face unequal access to the calories that are available. Implementing VSSs can provide opportunities to enhance women’s economic empowerment, improve food security and achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

VSSs have the potential to make significant contributions to sustainable development due to their influence on certification criteria and implementing procedures with farmers and agricultural communities.

Our report, available in English and French, explains how VSSs can be used as a tool to meet the SDGs and targets related to gender equality and women’s empowerment in agriculture. It also provides recommendations for development organizations working toward that goal. Specifically, the report analyzes how VSSs:

  • Can be leveraged to make positive contributions to gender equality
  • Can promote gender equality depending on certain conditions
  • Can exacerbate gender inequalities if not undertaken with sensitivity to local gender dynamics.

Report details

Topic
Food and Agriculture
Standards and Value Chains
Gender Equality
Focus area
Economies
Publisher
IISD
Copyright
IISD, 2019