Achieving a just and equitable transition to a sustainable energy system will rest on efforts to address gender inequality. Women in developing countries are impacted by energy poverty in far greater numbers than men, and they do not have the same opportunities as men to take advantage of emerging opportunities that can help deliver energy access for marginalised populations. This article, geared to policymakers, brings attention to six global trends – decentralisation of energy services, affordability, mobile payments, women’s entrepreneurship, urbanisation, and humanitarian settings. Achieving energy access for all, as called for under Sustainable Development Goal 7, will require attention to the ways in which these trends drive or hamper...
Interventions promoting productive use of electricity (PUE) without gender approaches are more likel...
This article reviews the empirical literature about gender and productive uses of energy, focusing o...
Access to energy is gendered. A lack of household energy affects women in developing countries more ...
Achieving a just and equitable transition to a sustainable energy system will rest on efforts to add...
The global drive to provide universal access to sustainable and modern energy by 2030 is creating nu...
It has long been understood that energy is a key contributing input to reaching development goals, b...
This paper derives from a collaboration between the Low Carbon Energy for Development Network (LCEDN...
Until recently, women have not been seen as having the potential for entrepreneurial success. Yet wo...
There is a substantial literature analysing the role of electricity as a catalyst for economic devel...
This background paper has been commissioned as a contribution to the preparation of the World Develo...
The article reviews and consolidates both theory and findings on the gender consequences of energy a...
Energy is a basic necessity for survival and a key input to economic and social development. In spit...
Transitions toward a low-carbon future are not only technical and economical, but also deeply social...
Policy makers and scholars often assume gender to be irrelevant in energy politics. However, an incr...
Rapidly falling renewable technology costs and new business models mean that decentralized ene...
Interventions promoting productive use of electricity (PUE) without gender approaches are more likel...
This article reviews the empirical literature about gender and productive uses of energy, focusing o...
Access to energy is gendered. A lack of household energy affects women in developing countries more ...
Achieving a just and equitable transition to a sustainable energy system will rest on efforts to add...
The global drive to provide universal access to sustainable and modern energy by 2030 is creating nu...
It has long been understood that energy is a key contributing input to reaching development goals, b...
This paper derives from a collaboration between the Low Carbon Energy for Development Network (LCEDN...
Until recently, women have not been seen as having the potential for entrepreneurial success. Yet wo...
There is a substantial literature analysing the role of electricity as a catalyst for economic devel...
This background paper has been commissioned as a contribution to the preparation of the World Develo...
The article reviews and consolidates both theory and findings on the gender consequences of energy a...
Energy is a basic necessity for survival and a key input to economic and social development. In spit...
Transitions toward a low-carbon future are not only technical and economical, but also deeply social...
Policy makers and scholars often assume gender to be irrelevant in energy politics. However, an incr...
Rapidly falling renewable technology costs and new business models mean that decentralized ene...
Interventions promoting productive use of electricity (PUE) without gender approaches are more likel...
This article reviews the empirical literature about gender and productive uses of energy, focusing o...
Access to energy is gendered. A lack of household energy affects women in developing countries more ...