Electricity access empowers women through expansion of economic, physical, and mental spaces in Zambia

Expanding electricity access (Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7) and empowering women (SDG 5) are closely linked. Most studies quantifying the benefits of the former for women focus on their economic empowerment; however, if and how such access results in women’s empowerment is best understood by examining the cultural context, norms, and gender roles in which that access occurs.

In this study, we delve deeper into the multi-faceted and context-specific concept of women’s empowerment via 28 semi-structured interviews with Zambian women. We include households with and without electricity to understand women’s subjective meaning of empowerment and how access to electricity may (dis) empower them. We analyze their responses using Deshmukh-Ranadive’s (2005) Spaces approach to empowerment which categorizes an individual’s spaces into physical, economic, political, socio-cultural, and mental space.

We find that electricity access empowers women by expanding their economic and physical, along with mental, space. This occurs via paid opportunities outside the home using electrical appliances and women reporting greater economic independence, camaraderie, self-reliance, and agency as a result. Additionally, by asking women to define what empowerment means to them, we not only bolster the claim that electricity access empowers women both economically and socially, but also ensure future programs account for empowerment explicitly in their plans.

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