Our approach: equal rights for women in cocoa farming
We promote awareness that men and women are equal and should therefore also receive equal pay and equal access to education. A further aspect of emancipation is income opportunity: given the relevant knowledge, wives of cocoa farmers can save their own money and apply for loans collectively. This is done via Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs), groups of 15 to 30 people, mostly women, who work together and pool their savings.
With the help of knowledge, a sense of community, and loans, they can unleash their entrepreneurial potential and implement their own plans, such as starting a vegetable-growing cooperative. Additional income from such initiatives improves the social status of women and the living standard of their families. Moreover, diversification in the crops grown—in Africa, bananas, corn, cassava, papaya, or pineapple, for example—opens up additional sources of income and contributes to improved food security. And additional income enables more children to go to school and at the same time reduces exploitative child labor.
We know that women’s income and education levels have a direct impact on their children’s health and education. Therefore, promoting women’s entrepreneurial skills and creating income-generating opportunities is of central importance to them in supporting their children’s education, improving local development, and making progress toward ending exploitative child labor.