Afghanistan-Indonesia-Germany Triangular Cooperation for Women’s Economic Empowerment

Sharing good practices of women engaged in the home industry sector

Challenges

Many Afghan women who are involved in micro and small-scale enterprises face numerous challenges, such as lack of access to finance, poor infrastructure and lack of business networks.  In general, Afghan women are not expected to have an income or carry out business, which in many cases means that they are expected to be inactive. Major difficulties arise from social norms and cultural prejudice, particularly in the rural areas, due to customs and tradition.  

 

While Afghan government policies tend to be gender-neutral, some issues are more pronounced for women. For example, Afghan women have less access to the market because their mobility is limited and they face language barriers. Afghan women are discriminated against in acquiring property or owning assets. Also, there are few inspiring role models of successful women entrepreneurs with similar backgrounds. 

Towards a Solution

Initiated in a kick-off exchange in October 2018, the Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection of Indonesia implemented a South-South and triangular cooperation initiative with the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit [Germany Development Cooperation Agency] (GIZ), in which Indonesia would share its best practices in empowering women through home industry with the Ministry of Women’s Affairs of Afghanistan. This cooperation aims to empower women in Afghanistan by learning from Indonesia’s experience in promoting the economy of less prosperous women in rural areas and in conditions of conservative patriarchal societies. 

 

To this end, the initiative aims to strengthen partnerships between Indonesia and Afghanistan through direct exchanges to identify best practices for the economic empowerment of women through home industry. This was followed by facilitating joint efforts to develop “A Concept for the Economic Empowerment of Women in conditions of Conservative Patriarchal Societies”, mutually agreed by Indonesia and Afghanistan for possible replication in Afghanistan. In its role as facilitating partner, GIZ ensured quality, partnership and sustainability throughout the process.   

 

The project approach focused on three key principles: 

  • Partnership:  Through three steering meetings, Indonesia, Afghanistan and Germany agreed on roles and responsibilities, including sharing of resources. All three partners fully participated in the entire process, including planning, implementation, monitoring and review.  
  • Joint learning for sustainabile development through horizontal exchanges and co-creation for women’s economic empowerment, project management and partnership effectiveness for development solutions. Accordingly, GIZ facilitated activities and partnership at the country level to ensure that demands and needs were met. 
  • Key activity: The key activity included two direct workshops and one virtual exchange (due to the COVID-19 pandemic) in which the key indicators of the projects were discussed and agreed, such as: (i) best practices for women’s economic empowerment through home industry; (ii) the one concept’ on women’s economic empowerment  to apply the agreed best practices in Afghanistan; and (iii) the lessons learned drawn from the triangular cooperation project for future South-South and triangular cooperation in Indonesia. The project took six months to prepare and 15 months to deliver, adjust the knowledge and monitor the implementation.   
 
 

Through evidence based on multistakeholder partnership, Indonesia and Afghanistan have achieved outcomes at many different levels (personnel, community, institutional). Examples include direct knowledge exchanges between sub-national officials of Indonesia and Afghanistan where the best practices for women in home industry were identified, and up to 200 diverse stakeholders were involved. These included individuals from national and sub-national government, national and local civil sociey organizations (CSOs), women’s community groups, religious leaders and business practitioners during the key processes.  

 

The project has a strong participatory approach throughout each stage of its implementation. Afghanistan’s national and sub-national officials are not simply passive beneficiaries, but rather active partners. They make key contributions towards achieving results, especially in: consolidating the sharing of knowledge with Indonesia;  validating the concept of women’s economic empowerment in home industry within Afghan culture and norms; and presenting the one concept learned from Indonesia to potential donors in Afghanistan for possible piloting.  

 

In Indonesia, this triangular cooperation initiative has shaped the capacity of the Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection to innovate the approaches to home industry development. In the tenth month of this triangular partnership, Indonesia was successful in drawing on lessons learned and in jointly creating the module, ‘Steps to Develop Home-Based Industry as reflection of its experiences in women’s economic empowerment within the project framework. The Module has been shared and accepted by the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, Afghanistan for reference in implementing the lessons learned from Indonesia in Afghanistan.  

 

In less than a year, the project has translated the exchange into concrete partnership action. To date, reflecting the lessons learned from Indonesia, led by the Deputy Ministry of Women’s Affairs of Afghanistan, there has been series of concrete actions on women’s economic empowerment in Afghanistanfirstexercising/piloting the one concept of home industry, learned in Indonesia, in Samangon Province; secondestablishing a packaging centre for women in Hazrat Sultan District; and third, presenting the lessons learned from Indonesia for funding possibilities and scaling up in Afghanistan.  

 

In Afghanistan, partners include community and religious leaders from Indonesia and Afghanistan, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), civil society organizations and government at all levels, including the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development, the Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Livestock, the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, the Ministry of Public Health, the Ministry of Finance, and the Women’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry.  

 

In Indonesia, the partners are women and individuals practising home industry and e-commerce, community and religious leaders, the Association of Women in Small Micro Business Assistance (ASPPUK)the Female-Headed Household Empowerment Programme’the Ministry of State Secretariat and the National Coordination Team on South-South Cooperation (NCT-SSC) which consistof four line Ministries for Foreign Affairs,  State Secretary, National Development Planning/Bappenas and Finance.  

Contact Information

Ms Neni Marlina, Principal Advisor, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

Countries involved

Afghanistan, Germany, Indonesia

Supported By

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

Implementing Entities

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

Project Status

Completed

Project Period

2019 - 2020

Primary SDG

05 - Gender Equality

Secondary SDGs

17 - Partnerships for the Goals

Primary SDG Targets

5.5 5.a 5.c

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