Gender Equality Female Empowerment: Usaid Mozambique
Gender Equality Female Empowerment: Usaid Mozambique
Gender Equality Female Empowerment: Usaid Mozambique
USAID/MOZAMBIQUE
Mozambique ranked 181st out of 188 countries in the 2015 UNDP Human Development Index, and
139th out of 159 countries in the UNDP Gender Inequality Index.1 Extreme poverty and the
HIV/AIDS epidemic have contributed to the precarious status of women and girls in the country.
Low levels of education, high maternal health risks, pressure to marry at a young age, limited
economic prospects, gender-based violence, and accepted cultural norms place women at a high
disadvantage.
Few girls finish primary school (46%), even fewer finish secondary school (22%), and 56% of women
are illiterate (upwards of 70% in rural areas).2,3 Though women comprise the bulk of the unskilled
workforce, especially in agriculture (63%), their work is largely unpaid, and they face many obstacles
and discrimination because of strongly held beliefs about gender roles.4 The media reinforces
negative stereotypes by portraying women as deserving of violence, and overlooks gender issues by
not providing in-depth coverage.5 High HIV infection in young women and adolescent girls (11%)6
when compared with men and boys of the same age, combined with maternal, newborn and child
mortality lead to a grave health situation for a large portion of the country’s growing population.
USAID/Mozambique works to achieve gender equality and female empowerment through cross-
sectoral initiatives dedicated to improving educational opportunities for women and girls,
1
UNDP Human Development Reports, 2015, http://hdr.undp.org/en/composite/GII.
2
PEPFAR Mozambique Gender Analysis Country Operational Planning 2016, pgs 8-9.
3
Perfil de Género de Moçambique, 2016, pg 9.
4
Perfil de Género de Moçambique, 2016, pg 17.
5
PEPFAR Mozambique Gender Analysis Country Operational Planning 2016, pg 10.
6
PEPFAR Mozambique Gender Analysis Country Operational Planning 2016, pg12.
The Nikhalamo activity reduces obstacles that impede the enrollment, retention, and transition to
secondary school for girls. The construction of separate latrines for boys and girls, plus interventions
that promote sanitation and hygiene practices, such as menstrual hygiene management, allow girls to
stay in school during their menstrual cycle.
The Viable Sweet Potato Technologies in Africa activity increases production and better
utilization of higher yield varieties of orange-fleshed sweet potato, trains and links women farmers to
the marketplace, and increases the awareness of women – particularly pregnant mothers – of the
food’s nutritional benefits, especially as a good source of vitamin A.
The Feed the Future Mozambique Agricultural Innovations activity supports women by
helping them assume higher-value and more influential roles, and identifying entry points for women
to participate in less traditional value chains that offer greater financial returns.
The Feed the Future Mozambique Improved Seeds for Better Agriculture activity
strengthens the national seed system and makes improved seeds available to smallholder farmers, in
particular to women, who make up a large portion of the agricultural workforce but who are often
disadvantaged in accessing agricultural technologies. This activity, together with the two Feed the
Future Mozambique Resilient Agriculture Markets activities, works to improve women’s
access to seeds and other agricultural inputs, improved crop management practices, and labor-saving
technologies.
The Integrated Family Planning Program increases the use of modern contraceptive methods
through improved health services, and reaches women with a high unmet need for family planning –
such as adolescents, women living with HIV, and postpartum women. The program purposefully
engages men and boys in an effort to shift inequitable gender norms and behaviors around
adolescent pregnancy, family size, and gender-based violence.
Through Fistula Care Plus, medical teams and staff expand access to care for women and girls
who are in need of medical attention. Supporting fistula repair helps to break down stigma and
gender-related barriers, and improve the status of affected women in their communities.
PEPFAR also provides youth-friendly services to decrease HIV incidence among adolescent girls and
young men, and to prevent girls from leaving school because of early pregnancy. PEPFAR engages
men and boys in health programs as agents of social and behavior change in efforts to promote safer
sex practices and raise awareness of the risks of sexually transmitted infections. Determined,
Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-Free, Mentored, and Safe (DREAMS) activities in
Mozambique implement a package of clinical and community-based services that invests in and
empowers girls and young women, decreases their risk of contracting HIV, and mobilizes the
community for change.
PEPFAR activities collaborate extensively with the Government of Mozambique’s Ministry of Health
and Ministry of Gender and Social Action. The activities support the host government’s provision of
quality preventive and clinical services, work to stabilize and consolidate health facility and
community-based interventions, and improve access to life-saving resources for Mozambique’s
citizens.