Giving Compass' Take:
- Amy Martin summarizes a report on the global inequities of COVID-19 hunger relief efforts, which have contributed to the marginalization of women and girls.
- How does this reinforce the notion that global systems undervalue the lives of women, girls, and other marginalized groups? How can you support equitable COVID-19 hunger relief efforts?
- Search a list of vetted funds for equitable COVID-19 hunger relief efforts.
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COVID-19 may leave an additional 130 million people hungry by the end of the year, according to the United Nations. And a recent report by CARE shows how women and girls are bearing the brunt of that burden.
The report, “Left Out and Left Behind: Ignoring Women Will Prevent Us from Solving the Hunger Crisis,” explains that women and girls are eating less, earning less, and struggling to find food for their families. Despite this, they’ve been overlooked in most international COVID-19 relief plans. Of the 73 documents CARE reviewed, just 7 percent proposed concrete actions to address gender inequality.
Business closures and social distancing measures have barred women and girls from work across the globe. In Northeast Nigeria, women no longer have access to cash for work programs they rely on to buy seeds and crops. Half of women in Palestine have lost all of their income, versus just one-third of men.
Despite the disproportionate challenges facing women and girls, many policymakers have failed to address gender inequalities. CARE reviewed 73 COVID-19 hunger crisis reports and guidance documents. Among them, 34 documents ignored women and girls entirely, and only five proposed actionable solutions to gender inequality.
CARE’s report also points out that 27 documents painted women and girls as “victims”—even though women across the world are providing food for their communities during COVID-19.
“Organizations and officials need to include the ‘and,’” Tonya Rawe, Director of Global Food and Nutrition Security Advocacy at CARE tells Food Tank. “Women are more at risk of hunger and malnutrition and they are themselves powerful agents who are stepping up to lead in their families and communities because they already play pivotal roles in food systems.”
Read the full article about gender injustices in COVID-19 hunger relief by Amy Martin at Food Tank.