Archives

Search Archives

The future of citizen engagement: Find out what's at stake for our democracy. More »

Recent Spotlights »

View all Archives - Human Rights »

Created Equal: A Report on Ford Foundation Women's Programs







International Division

As women and men in increasing numbers of countries were drawing attention to sex discrimination and the need to make girls and women full participants in the development process, the Foundation was positioning itself to encourage expanded opportunities for Third World women. Early in the 1970s the International Division began shifting away from a concentration on building social science programs, academic institutions, and governmental capacity. Increasingly, grants were made to further voluntary organizations' work on critical problems. This readiness to consider proposals from nongovernmental groups did not, however, lead immediately to funding women's programs. First came lengthy discussions of whether women's programs were justified in their own right or gained legitimacy only insofar as they advanced general development objectives. Some staff members also urged the Foundation to be wary of exporting U.S. cultural values.

Where early grant making did occur, the Foundation carefully and cautiously, usually to support analyses of discrimination and its consequences. In a few field offices, grants were made to new women's groups, with the expectation that many of them would survive and constitute a base for later programming. By the late 1970s it had become increasingly clear that the empowerment of women was an issue of indigenous concern in the Third World, and all field offices had begun at least exploratory grant making.

The resulting women's programs in the International Division focused on three related areas: improving women's productive capacity and opportunities for employment and earning income; promoting sex equity in education; and understanding and reducing cultural constraints on women's social and economic participation. Two overall strategies emerged to address the numerous issues implied in each of these areas. One was funding basic research to explore and publicize the roles and status of women in developing countries. The second addressed the paucity of women qualified to fill professional positions.

The division's first women's grants not only helped build a base of knowledge and information, but also advanced the research careers of outstanding feminist scholars and helped create the institutions that would continue their pioneering work. For example, both female scholars and women's concerns featured prominently in the Middle East Awards program for population research, jointly funded by the Foundation, the Population Council, and the International Development