Resources

Factors and norms influencing unpaid care work: Household survey evidence from five rural communities in Colombia, Ethiopia, the Philippines, Uganda, and Zimbabwe

November 15, 2016

In order to address ‘heavy’ and ‘unequal’ care work and to raise the profile of care as a cross-cutting development issue, Oxfam and its partners implemented a baseline Household Care Survey (HCS) in five countries in which the WE-Care project was active.

Women’s Economic Empowerment and Care: Phase 1 Final Report

November 2, 2016

The first phase of the WE-Care programme built on Oxfam’s previous experience with Rapid Care Analysis methodologies in livelihoods programmes. The programme aimed to complement and strengthen Oxfam’s initiatives on women’s leadership and livelihoods by building evidence for influencing change on care, while also providing the development sector with methods and knowledge to strengthen future advocacy on women’s economic empowerment and care work.

WE-Care Malawi Programme Report: Linking unpaid care work and mobile value-added services in Malawi

November 2, 2016

This report describes the use of information and communications technologies for data gathering, analysis and implementation of a randomized control trial. This aimed to understand the impact that access to Nutrition (Agri and Health) services had on the allocation of time to unpaid care work.

Market systems approaches to enabling women’s economic empowerment through addressing unpaid care work

March 5, 2016

The paper proposes that market systems programmes should, at a minimum, incorporate an understanding of care work into market analysis, to avoid unintended consequences and ensure that women as well as men benefit from interventions.

Women’s Economic Empowerment and Care: Evidence for influencing

July 20, 2015

To gain a clearer understanding of care work and pathways of change to promote more equitable care provision, Oxfam conducted a Household Care Survey in communities of rural Colombia, Ethiopia, the Philippines, Uganda and Zimbabwe. Data were collected on household characteristics, members’ time use, socioeconomic status, social norms, labour-saving equipment and public infrastructure.

Redistributing care work for gender equality and justice: A training curriculum

June 15, 2015

Designed for community facilitators working with illiterate or semi-literate groups, this training curriculum is intended for women and men to understand and challenge the conventional view of the economy by putting care for people and the environment first. It unpacks how power can be challenged at the household, community and state levels to recognize, reduce and redistribute women’s unpaid care work.

Oxfam’s WE-Care Initiative: An overview

May 20, 2015

Oxfam's 2014–2017 WE-Care initiative addressed the unequal burden of care and housework to improve outcomes for women in their food security, political participation, and other programs. Directly active in ten countries like Colombia and Uganda, aspects of WE-Care were also implemented in Bangladesh and Honduras through Oxfam Canada, GB, and Novib.