Back to news
13 Mar 2018 | RMS

Empowering rural women: A shift from household chores to construction work

Menaka Hamal

2 mins Read

70% Complete
Women operating the brick making machine at Dhunganitar in Nuwakot. Photo credit: Ram Kumar Tamang, ICIMOD

During recent fieldwork in Nuwakot, our team came across a group of women decked in safety gear doing construction work. They handled high-powered machines with ease and their traditional clothes underneath the safety helmets and jackets helped us appreciate what a unique and powerful sight this was.

The women were making construction material in Dhungentar at a brick manufacturing site to support reconstruction and rehabilitation work. The site is one part of the Resilient Mountain Village (RMV) concept, which takes a holistic approach to development, involving all members of a community in a collective effort to strengthen and sustain rural livelihoods. The integrated RMV approach evolved at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD).

The brick making machines themselves were an innovation imported from the Asian Institute of Technology in Bangkok, which compress earthen materials into compact blocks that interlock with the other bricks for additional strength.

When the RMV work began in Dhuganitar, men dominated property ownership and income generating work. Women were almost entirely dependent on men for financial support.

The women we spoke to expressed a consistent desire to increase their earning potential. However, they often lacked the skills necessary to find better paying work. With this idea in mind, we targeted opportunities to provide women with training in skilled labor, such as brick making. The response was terrific: 86% of the women in Dhungentar participated in the training. Now they can earn extra income when their children are at school or during leisure hours.

One of these women, a 22-year old, said the project was helping to build confidence among the women who participated in the training. Initially she had no experience working with machines, but now she says she feels she can learn even more complex work like making plaster and building house foundations.

Women transferring bricks. Photo credit: Ram Kumar Tamang, ICIMOD

 

Enhancing women’s skills could not come at a more important time, as more and more men and young persons are going abroad for work. In many villages, rehabilitation efforts have been hampered by the lack of available labour needed to rebuild houses and community buildings. Women have stepped into this void, and initiatives dedicated to building their capacity to contribute have helped immensely. And the situation is win-win: women are strengthening rehabilitation work while also improving the earning potential.

Compared to other settlements I had visited – where tarpaulin and tin shelters were still plentiful after the earthquake – families in Dhungentar were building new homes with earthquake-resistant materials. And this was also true for all the Dalit households in the village.

While these developments in women’s skilled labour are encouraging, there is more work to do. In a focus group discussion with a gathering of men, one of them said, “Cows cannot be used for ploughing.” This traditional saying means that men do not want women to earn money through physical labour. Instead, women should work only in the home, caring for domestic needs.

On this International Women’s Day, we should note that while some efforts, like RMVs, are hoping to unleash the potential of women to acquire new skills and create better lives with added income, real change can only be achieved when we all—men and women—share this belief. Only then can we bridge the gap that keeps women from making stronger contributions to their families and society.

A woman engaged in plasterwork during the reconstruction of the Nuwakot Durbar Square. Photo credit: Anju Pandit

 

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Content

Continue exploring this topic

8 Mar 2018 Gender in Koshi
Women and Fieldwork: Reclaiming public spaces and transgressing curfews

Women’s Day brings into focus women situated at various intersections of class, age, caste, race, education, culture, and geographical location. ...

3 Aug 2016 Blog
On a field trip with journalists to Koshi River basin

The scars over the hills of Jure village in Sindupalchok district, nearly 40 kms south of the Nepal’s capital Kathmandu, ...

26 Jul 2018 Blog
Experiences from the Third International REDD+ Training at the Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand

When I confirmed my participation at the third International REDD+ training at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) in Thailand, ...

21 Mar 2019 Blog
Every drop of fresh water matters, every little fish counts

The rivers of the Hindu Kush Himalaya provide numerous critical goods and services to nearly two billion people, residing both ...

8 Mar 2017 Blog
A Journey of Courage and Determination: Menaka’s Story

Menaka’s quiet demeanour disguises her wit and her great sense of humour. Her journey from a remote village in Mugu ...

9 Aug 2016 Blog
Rasuwa Diary: Micro Hydro Potential

Kathmandu, the Nepali capital, is a city with 100 percent reach to the national grid, but it is reeling under ...

13 Mar 2018 Gender in Koshi
Juggling ‘two fronts’ – the women of today

Women are increasingly getting an education in underdeveloped/developing countries, despite this by no means being the norm (for example, according ...

10 Jul 2017 Blog
Irrigation schemes get a breath of fresh air in Pakistan

Research in agriculture is often looked at sceptically in developing countries, where it is believed that innovative technologies can only ...