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Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

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Page 1: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Technology’s Quiet Revolution:Driving Women’s Empowerment

Isobel ColemanSenior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Page 2: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Technology Transforming Daily Lives

• Reducing maternal death and family size

• Enabling girls’ education/income generation

• Creating greater connectivity with society/increased social awareness/civil society/activism

Page 3: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

High Rates of Maternal Mortality in Africa/South Asia

(World Health Organization 2012)

Page 4: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Maternal deaths per 100,000 Births:1990 vs. 2010

(MDG Goals Report, 2013)

Page 5: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Rising Access to Contraception

(Shannon Jensen, AFP / Getty Images)

Page 6: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Falling Fertility Rates

United States India Zimbabwe Colombia Morocco Bangladesh Iran0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Number of years it took fertility in each country to fall from 6 children to less than 3

(World Bank, 2012)

Page 7: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Fertility Decline in Developing Countries

• 32 developing countries with fertility levels below replacement (by 2010)– Vietnam and Thailand in Southeast Asia– Algeria, Tunisia, Lebanon, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan,

Brunei, and Iran in MENA– Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Chile, Costa Rica,

Uruguay, and Suriname in Latin America

• 90% of 40 highest fertility countries in sub-Saharan Africa

Page 8: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Labor-Savings Critical for Women’s Empowerment

(Reuters)

Page 9: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Women Spend Upwards of 50% Waking Hours Collecting Water/Firewood

Page 10: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Household Pollution a Health Disaster

(Athar Hussain, Reuters)

Page 11: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Clean Cook Stoves: Saving Time/ Improving Health

(University of Washington)

Page 12: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Women in Agriculture

Page 13: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Kickstart Water Pumps

(ICRW Invisible Market)

Page 14: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Solar-Powered Irrigation

Page 15: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Women adopting new seeds/techniques necessary for next Green Revolution

(Mohanned Faisal, Reuters)

Page 16: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Mobile Phones Empowering Women

(Reuters)

Page 17: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Gender Gap in Access is Closing

Women less likely to own/access a cell phone than men in low and middle-income countries, but gap is narrowing

(AFP)

Women with cell phones report feeling: - more secure- more independent

Page 18: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Marketing Cellphones to Women

(Roshan)

Page 19: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Mobile Tech andCommunity Health in Ghana

(Grameen Foundation)

Page 20: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Internet Activism

Manal Al Sharif and women2drive campaign

Page 21: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Esraa Abdel Fattah “Facebook Girl”

(Lucas Jackson, Reuters)

Page 22: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Media Messaging Women’s Rights

Issue-based Afghan drama series Rehaii

Page 23: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Turkish soap opera Noor

Soap Operas Challenging Mores

Page 24: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Dark Side to Technology

Page 25: Technology’s Quiet Revolution: Driving Women’s Empowerment Isobel Coleman Senior Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations

Gaining Speed: Technology’s Quiet Revolution for Women