Tackling all forms of discrimination and building diverse, inclusive communities and workplaces is vital to creating opportunities for everyone in the supply chain – and to achieving UN Sustainability Development Goals 5 and 10, which aim to reducing all forms inequality, but especially equal opportunity for women of all ages.
In many communities, women have unequal decision-making power, control over income, and access to education, finance, and land. In fact, according to the FAO, almost two-thirds of the world’s illiterate adults are women (565 million) and most live in the developing nations of Africa, Asia, and Latin America, where much of the world’s food is grown and processed. These women need support, whether that’s through literacy classes, health awareness programmes or professional development initiatives, designed to build confidence, motivation, and financial autonomy.
AtSource+ allows customers to track the support that is being provided to the women in their supply chain, measure the effectiveness of diversity efforts, and put action plans in place to drive further improvement.
It measures a number of key metrics including:
Number of registered farmers in a farmer group held by women
Number of female farmers attending Good Agricultural Practices training
Number of women in a farmer group holding leadership positions
Number of local and foreign employees
More info on metrics? Read here
ofi’s Women on the Roads for Hazelnuts program works with female seasonal migrant workers in the four main sourcing regions to provide training on labor rights, gender equality, first aid and basic healthcare.
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