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Women Leaders in Learning for Development

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Presentation on theme: "Women Leaders in Learning for Development"— Presentation transcript:

1 Women Leaders in Learning for Development
3 August, 2016: Koforidua Polytechnic, Ghana Professor Asha Kanwar, Dr K Balasubramanian, Rosanne Wong Commonwealth of Learning

2 Outline Context Reflecting on Women’s Leadership
Two Faces of Transformational Leadership Towards transformation & empowerment

3 I. Context

4 Women disadvantaged Rights Resources Voice

5 Gender Gap in Commonwealth Countries (2013)
Low Ranking High Ranking New Zealand (7) Lesotho (16) United Kingdom(18) Canada (20) Pakistan (135) Nigeria (106) India (101) 2013 ranking. Out of 136 countries. Source: World Economic Forum – The Global Gender Gap Report Retrieved July 15, 2014.

6 Poverty has a female face

7 Vice-Chancellors: Gender Statistics
Country % Of Female Vice-chancellors Of Public Universities 14% 3% Source: British Council, Going Global 2015, Defined by absence: the Invisible women in HE Leadership

8 II. Women and Leadership

9 Women and education in Canada
25-34 year olds with a university degree 1990 15% women 15.6% men 2009 34% 26% Source: Women in Canada at a Glance Statistical Highlights 2012

10 Why so few women reach the top?
Family responsibilities Social norms Desire to be liked

11 Gender Bias: Howard/Heidi
Heidi Roizen: successful by using her ‘outgoing personality…and vast personal and professional network [that] included many of the most powerful business leaders in the technology sector’ Impressions: Howard Roizen Appealing colleague Heidi Roizen Selfish Source: Sandberg, 2013, pp

12 Are women leaders preferred?
40% prefer male managers 20% prefer women 44% women preferred male managers Only 23% preferred women Source: Ranstad, 2011

13 III. Two Faces of Transformational Leadership

14 Transformational leadership enables the disempowered to get empowered.

15 Empowerment Empowerment is the process of increasing the capacity of individuals or groups to make choices and to transform those choices into desired actions and outcomes. Source: World Bank, Empowerment,

16 Dame Carol Kidu Papua New Guinea
Australian Married a professional from PNG and became a citizen Integrated into the culture and society Saw the poverty, domestic violence against women; women’s disempowerment in her society Photo credit: Australian Married a professional from PNG and became a citizen Integrated into the culture and society Saw the poverty, domestic violence against women; women’s disempowerment in her society Photo credit: Digicel Foundation

17 Her contribution Established community learning centres
Promoted lifelong learning Helped other women to become leaders Won all elections but chose to retire from politics and work in an NGO

18 Women leaders… walk with people, they talk with people, they learn from people and they lead by example.” Dame Carol Kidu Photo credit: Photo credit: The Cairns Post

19 Peria Jakkamal India Illiterate from a remote village
Restrictions on women’s movement outside the village No asset or resources Joined an NGO and started SHGs in her village

20 Her contribution Mobilized women to become learners
Empowered the community to negotiate with financial institutions

21 For her Leadership is not a permanent fixture - It is highly temporal-when more efficient leaders are emerging, you should pave the way and support them.” Peria Jakkamal

22 What do they share? People-oriented: empathetic and respectful
Courageous Effective negotiators Networkers and communicators Lifelong learners

23 IV. Towards Transformational Leadership & Empowerment

24 Women Leaders in Development
Leadership evolves through non-formal and informal processes No structured roadmap for the evolution of leadership Leadership is issue-based and not necessarily based on a position

25 Transformational Leadership & Empowerment
Can take place at the bottom of pyramid, not just in the boardroom While leadership is studied mostly from corporate and political level, transformational leadership at the Bottom of the Pyramid needs to be looked into. The role of learning, education and extension in evolving transformational leadership needs understanding.

26 Key Message Transformational leadership is a skill and must be promoted among women if the SDGs are to be realised by 2030.

27 Thank You We invite you to engage us; tap into our thought leadership, expertise, networks and resources


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