Trabalho Apresentado em Evento
Introducing Gender Awareness to Elementary School Teachers in Rural Bahia, Brazil
Fecha
2000Registro en:
392960356X
Proceedings of Fourth International COnference of the Centre for Women in Rural Development
Autor
Sardenberg, Cecília Maria Bacellar
Sardenberg, Cecília Maria Bacellar
Institución
Resumen
In rural Brazil, where illiteracy rates still run rampant, school teachers tend to be
regarded highly and should be engaged in the fostering of women’s empowerment. In
addition to their direct participation in instilling new values to children in classrooms—
and thus to the future generations of local producers—they often are also persons who
hold leadership positions in their communities. ‘Educating’ rural teachers on gender
issues, therefore, should be regarded as an important strategy in working towards
gender equity in rural development projects.
In this paper, I will discuss these issues further while sharing my experience as
part of a group of external consultants on gender issues in a major rural development
project in Bahia-- the first one in the state to incorporate a gender perspective.2 Funded
by IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development) and implemented by CAR,
an agency linked to the Planning Bureau of the State of Bahia, this project is a very
ambitious development effort; it aims to improve the quality of life in rural
communities of 13 counties covering an area of approximately 4,580 square miles in
one of the most deprived, driest, and poorest regions of the state. Project plans call for
a series of actions within three major components: production development,
community development, and rural credit services. They include the construction of
dams and irrigation systems, provision of special credit and agricultural extension
services to small producers, devising more effective means of marketing products, and
strengthening local producers associations and their management skills.