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Mainstreaming gender in transboundary natural resources projects – the experience of the Bay of Bengal Large Marine Ecosystem (BOBLME) project

This paper examines how gender equality can be addressed in transboundary natural resources projects, even if it was not initially considered.

Cecile Brugere / Published on 28 May 2014

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Citation

Brugere, C. (2014). Mainstreaming gender in transboundary natural resources projects - the experience of the Bay of Bengal Large Marine Ecosystem (BOBLME) project. Environmental Development, in press, online 24 May 2014.

The Bay of Bengal Large Marine Ecosystem (BOBLME) project aims to improve the lives of men and women depending on the fisheries resources of the Bay of Bengal. Despite the major role women play in fisheries, the strategic action plan and other key outputs of the project have remained gender-blind.

The paper proposes that the Theory of Change offers a compelling framework to consider how this could be redressed in an ex-post manner, enabling transboundary natural resources projects such as the BOBLME project to contribute to gender equality and women’s empowerment.

Practical steps are suggested. They include the elaboration of a high-level statement of political will to gender equality and the consideration of gender-sensitive actions and cross-cutting issues covering communication, gender-disaggregated data collection and governance. A commitment to impact through human capacity building and the allocation of adequate budgets for gender mainstreaming, is fundamental to embrace the change process that progress towards gender equality requires.

In line with the Theory of Change, the development of a pathway to impact and use of gender-sensitive outcome mapping as a form of monitoring and evaluation are suggested as pivotal in capturing the changes that are expected as a result of both mainstreaming gender in the project and the project’s own influence in progressing towards gender equality in the region.

The mainstreaming approach proposed could be generalized to other transboundary natural resources projects of a similar institutional and operational structure to the BOBLME project.

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Cecile Brugere

SEI Affiliated Researcher

SEI York

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10.1016/j.envdev.2014.05.003 Closed access
Topics and subtopics
Water : Water resources / Gender : Adaptation
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