Women Transform Their Horizons In Rural Morocco
A research
study reveals the positive community impact of sustainable
agricultural initiatives when preceded by women’s
empowerment workshops, leading to participatory action,
enhanced community well-being, and
decentralization. Since 2016, the High Atlas
Foundation has implemented self-discovery workshops that
encourage and equip women to recognize their intrinsic
value, identify their goals, and strategically consider
their plans for the future. The “Imagine” program takes
place over four days and provides a space for pursuing
personal and collective empowerment. Imagine utilizes
a rights-based approach that integrates Morocco’s Family
Code – Moudawana – and facilitates women’s exploration
of their legal protections. Cooperative-building activities
also enable women to increase their financial independence
and access to equitable development. The High Atlas
Foundation recently conducted a comparative impact analysis
with two groups of women in the Toubkal rural municipality
of the Taroudant province following two climate actions. In
2017, HAF hosted an Imagine empowerment and development
experience with women in the Aguerzrane village. During the
experience, the participants examined social relationships
in their lives that influence their ability to advance their
goals. Throughout the workshop, participants further
considered their outlook on work and money, emotions and
body, sexuality and spirituality (in a Moroccan-Islamic
context), and their vision for the future.
After the
participatory planning experience, the Aguerzrane women
decided to build an organic fruit tree and medicinal herb
nursery. This method of cultivation, the women realized,
would generate income through plant sales in their region as
well as contribute to the existing household needs of the
community. The nursery was built in 2018 on newly
constructed agricultural terraces built on formerly eroding
mountainsides, and the nursery has been productively
operating ever since. The provision of regular technical
training has been provided by highly qualified volunteers
through the USAID Farmer-to-Farmer Program. The
second village, Missour, is one kilometer north of
Aguerzrane. In 2018, HAF received a request from their
farmers for cherry, walnut, and almond trees, and HAF met
the request. The Imagine workshop and participatory methods
were not facilitated in this community, but the farmers
received, planted, and maintained the trees based on the
quantity and variety they preferred. HAF then
assisted a graduate thesis study that examined the social
and economic effect on both villages: Aguerzane, which
participated in the women’s empowerment workshop prior to
receiving seeds and materials; and Missour, where trees were
provided without inclusive participatory planning. The
researcher, Nora Martetschläger, spent three months living
with the communities, engaging in individual and communal
data gathering procedures to analyze multidimensional
poverty. In
her published summary of the analysis, Nora found that
“although the other village [Aguerzane], where fewer trees
were planted, performed worse overall on most poverty
indicators, women’s participation in education and
employment was higher because of more individual and
collective awareness and action in those areas.” In
Missour, however, there was a negligible income benefit for
the women despite reported increases in household earnings
and food security. There was no increase in girls’
participation in education or women’s literacy. However,
two families moved to the city – likely partially enabled
by the new income – where there are more opportunities for
girls’ participation in education. This study
illuminates a significant challenge in the connection
between women’s empowerment and scalable climate action
for inclusive systemic change and national resilience.
HAF’s women’s empowerment workshops have proven to be an
effective strategy for improving cross-sectoral sustainable
development. However, the demand for such strategies is
limited by organizational capacity. Upon reviewing Nora’s
study, HAF took remedial action in Missour by facilitating
Imagine workshops. Funds from the Darden School of the
University of Virginia will be used to build agricultural
terraces on an eroding mountainside the Missour community
designated for the women's group. However, the
limiting issue of capacity remains: HAF has 15 empowerment
trainers and anticipates planting a minimum of 1.7 million
trees with 10,000 farming families in 160 municipalities
this year. These objectives are indicative of a broader
structural challenge to the implementation of strategic,
community designed solutions. HAF lacks the finances and
personnel to implement and monitor climate-smart agriculture
to ensure that women and girls are the direct beneficiaries,
despite having a strategy to acheive national
scale. This study also reveals the potential
challenges to implementing decentralization without first
solidifying participatory experiences at the local level.
The enhanced subnational power afforded by decentralization
will entrench existing class and gender based
stratifications in subnational jurisdictions. Climate-smart
agricultural projects could have the same effect of
affirming inequitable power and resource distribution if
such projects are not founded on participatory experiences.
Women’s and girls’ participation and management in all
phases of development must be front and center in order for
climate actions to positively impact their lives, families,
communities, and
country. ENDS Dr. Yossef Ben-Meir is
President of the High Atlas Foundation and a Visiting
Professor of the University of
Virginia.