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<DIV><BR>Islamabad,4/22/2003 (IRIN) - The United Nations Development Fund for
Women<BR>(UNIFEM) has launched a research project to establish how vulnerable
and<BR>disadvantaged women are in Afghanistan. The study is focusing on
sexual<BR>division of labour to explore the dynamics of the country's
diverse<BR>livelihood patterns and how they fit into the larger picture
of<BR>reconstruction.<BR><BR>"We are trying to situate the question of women's
rights in studying the<BR>diverse livelihood context of Afghanistan," Deniz
Kandiyoti, a British<BR>anthropologist initiating the research for UNIFEM, told
IRIN from the<BR>Afghan capital, Kabul, on Tuesday. "We are trying to combine
the gender<BR>analysis with the livelihood analysis."<BR><BR>The research was
initiated with a pilot project in the northeastern<BR>province of Parvan in
September 2002. On the basis of that study, research<BR>is being carried on
gender and livelihood systems in the northeastern<BR>provinces of Laghman and
Takhar and the western province of Herat.<BR><BR>In addition to some studies of
the ongoing women-targeted projects such as<BR>the World Food Programme's
women's bakeries and CARE's humanitarian<BR>assistance to widows in Kabul, the
research is expected to be complete<BR>next March. Kandiyoti said the study
would also contribute to a more<BR>extensive livelihood study being carried by
the Afghanistan Research and<BR>Evaluation Unit in seven provinces.<BR><BR>"It
will hopefully give us a more precise picture of how the domestic<BR>economy
functions and how the 23 years of conflict have modified local<BR>economies and
how women are coping," she said. The study is expected to<BR>help the UN,
donors, the Afghan government and aid agencies gain ideas on<BR>ways of
empowering women.<BR><BR>"NGOs in the regions who have been involved in relief
and rehabilitation<BR>work and who are hoping to move in a situation of peace to
more<BR>sustainable development need to develop both ecologically and
culturally<BR>appropriate projects," Kandiyoti observed.<BR><BR>Referring to her
findings to date, she maintained that although<BR>Afghanistan had a patriarchal
social structure, whereby women were<BR>supposed to be protected in the domestic
sphere, the war had changed that,<BR>and widows or other women were forced to
head households. "This is a new<BR>and very deep form of poverty, and it is a
very painful situation," she<BR>said.<BR><BR>Meanwhile, in an attempt to improve
facilities for women, the Rabia Balkhi<BR>Women's Hospital in Kabul reopened on
Monday after the completion of a<BR>six-month renovation project supported by
the US Health and Human Services<BR>(HSS) and Defense departments, according to
an HHS press release.<BR>Restoring the damaged, ill-equipped facility is
considered a significant<BR>step towards improving health care in the country,
especially for women<BR>and children, many of whom currently die of preventable
or treatable<BR>conditions.<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR></DIV></BODY></HTML>