Suppr超能文献

妇女团体与新冠疫情:关于非洲储蓄团体的证据综述

Women's groups and COVID-19: An evidence review on savings groups in Africa.

作者信息

Adegbite Olayinka, Anderson Leigh, Chidiac Sybil, Dirisu Osasuyi, Grzeslo Jenna, Hakspiel Julia, Holla Chinmaya, Janoch Emily, Jafa Krishna, Jayaram Shubha, Majara Grace, Mulyampiti Tabitha, Namisango Eve, Noble Eva, Onyishi Bukola, Panetta David, Siwach Garima, Sulaiman Munshi, Walcott Rebecca, Desai Sapna, de Hoop Thomas

机构信息

Independent Consultant, Ibidan, Nigeria.

EPAR Evans School of Public Policy and Governance, Seattle, USA.

出版信息

Gates Open Res. 2022 Apr 12;6:47. doi: 10.12688/gatesopenres.13550.1. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and some of the associated policy responses have resulted in significant gendered impacts that may reverse recent progress in gender equality, including in sub-Saharan Africa. This paper presents emerging evidence from studies in diverse contexts in sub-Saharan Africa -with a deep dive into Nigeria and Uganda-on how COVID-19 has affected women's groups, especially savings groups, and how these groups have helped mitigate the gendered effects of the pandemic's and the associated policy responses' consequences up until April 2021. The synthesis presents evidence that savings groups found ways to continue operating, provided leadership opportunities for women during the pandemic, and mitigated some of the negative economic consequences of COVID-19 on individual savings group members. Savings, credit, and group support from other members all likely contributed to the ability of groups to positively affect the resilience of women's group member during COVID-19. Households with a female member in a savings group in Nigeria and Uganda have coped with the crisis better than those not in savings groups. While savings groups have shown the potential for resilience during the pandemic, they often faced financial challenges because of decreased savings, which sometimes resulted in the depletion of group assets. Savings groups also contributed to community responses and provided women a platform for leadership. These findings are consistent with a recent evidence synthesis on how past covariate shocks affected women's groups and their members. We conclude the paper by presenting various policy recommendations to enable savings groups to achieve improvements in women's empowerment and economic outcomes, and research recommendations to address some of the current evidence gaps on how COVID-19 is affecting women's groups and their members.

摘要

2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行以及一些相关政策应对措施产生了重大的性别影响,可能会逆转包括撒哈拉以南非洲地区在内的性别平等方面的近期进展。本文展示了来自撒哈拉以南非洲地区不同背景研究的新证据——深入研究了尼日利亚和乌干达——关于COVID-19如何影响妇女团体,特别是储蓄团体,以及这些团体如何在2021年4月之前帮助减轻大流行及其相关政策应对措施后果的性别影响。综合分析表明,储蓄团体找到了继续运营的方法,在大流行期间为妇女提供了领导机会,并减轻了COVID-19对个别储蓄团体成员的一些负面经济影响。储蓄、信贷以及其他成员的团体支持都可能有助于团体在COVID-19期间积极影响妇女团体成员的复原力。在尼日利亚和乌干达,有女性成员加入储蓄团体的家庭比没有加入储蓄团体的家庭更好地应对了危机。虽然储蓄团体在大流行期间显示出了复原力的潜力,但由于储蓄减少,它们经常面临财务挑战,这有时导致团体资产耗尽。储蓄团体还为社区应对做出了贡献,并为妇女提供了一个发挥领导作用的平台。这些发现与最近关于过去协变量冲击如何影响妇女团体及其成员的证据综合分析一致。我们在论文结尾提出了各种政策建议,以使储蓄团体能够在增强妇女权能和改善经济成果方面取得进展,以及研究建议,以解决目前关于COVID-19如何影响妇女团体及其成员的一些证据空白。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4ee5/9513104/ab31e0229970/gatesopenres-6-14816-g0000.jpg

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验