Back to resources

Report: Build the Field. Build the Movement. Engaging Young Men & Boys in India.

Laayak | Gender Empowerment | Nov 2, 2021

While the good work for the betterment of women and girls in India has to continue, the work in gender equity shall remain incomplete unless young men and boys are brought within the ambit of interventions. We need to onboard men, not only for causes of women such as achieving goals of women empowerment and zero violence against women but also for men’s own development.

India has 200 million young men, bringing to mind certain questions.

  • How will they be liberated from the identities that patriarchy, religion, caste and society have defined for them?
  • Do they have safe, shared spaces to explore questions and discover themselves? How do they use their human potential?
  • What gaps in their education do they want to fill and how will they do that? • What kind of pressures does the role of ‘the primary breadwinner’ impose on them?
  • Given that the meaning of work and the nature of jobs are going to change dramatically in the next few decades, are we going to continue to define men by these parameters?

When a movement towards addressing these issues is put in place, there will be a holistic integration of men and boys into the movement for the rights of women and girls. Over the past three years, RNP has partnered, through “learning grants”, with ten organisations that either exclusively focuses their work on Young Men and Boys, or include men and boys in the gender empowerment efforts for girls and women. This blue book intends to present a snapshot of the models and approaches being taken by RNP’s partners, and serve as a public resource for others who might be interested in gender-transformative work.

RNP invited niiti consulting to observe the operating models of the ten grantee organisations, and record the challenges faced, along with approaches adopted for mitigation of these. The intent was also to record the implementation, monitoring and measurement programme templates, the narrative of the results and the change in young men and boys. The experiences of each grantee organisation could be drawn upon by implementing organisations, governments and funders across the country for inspiration, guidance or refinement of their own interventions for young boys and men.

Read the Full Report

More like this

Laayak

Women In India

Women in India share many of the problems that face their counterparts in the U.S., such as sexual harassment, lower wages, political exclusion, and physical violence which, at its worst, culminates in rape and even brideburning. In addition, however, most Indian women, and in fact many women all over the Third World, carry the double […]
Jan 10, 1985 | Article

Laayak

Want Empowered Women? Start Thinking About how to Help Young Men.

We need to turn to the 200 million young men of India with as much urgency and focus as we spend on the millions of young women in the country. Every day, we hear of horrible atrocities that have taken place against girls and women in India. This is despite the fact that as a country, […]
Dec 14, 2017 | Article

Laayak

महिलाओं के साथ पुरुषों को भी सशक्त करना होगा

समाज… क्या हम रचनात्मक रूप से युवा पुरुषों के सशक्तीकरण की चुनौती का भी सामना कर सकते हैं? मशहूर टीवी सीरियल की तरह हम लड़कियों को यह उम्मीद देने की कोशिश कर रहे हैं कि ‘मैं कुछ भी कर सकती हूं।’ इसके परिणाम भी सकारात्मक आ रहे हैं। आज ज्यादातर लड़कियां स्कूल जाती हैं। उन्हें […]
Mar 30, 2019 | Article

Strategic Philanthropy  |  Laayak

Curiosity Over Certainty: A Learning Approach to Grantmaking

In this piece, Natasha Joshi, Associate Director at Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies, writes about a learning approach to grantmaking emerging from our work with Young Men & Boys In the work of creating a gender-equitable society, men play an essential role – this is labour that women should not and cannot shoulder alone. But in virtually […]
Mar 30, 2021 |