Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change

This research paper analyzes the impact of women’s empowerment (WE) on green economic growth (GEG) and vulnerability to climate change (VCC) in South Asian countries for the period 1995-2023. This article contributes to the literature on the factors that influence GEG and VCC, and the significance...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bushra Mushtaq, Muhammad Afzal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National University of Sciences and Technology 2024-12-01
Series:NUST Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://njssh.nust.edu.pk/index.php/njssh/article/view/207
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846094358650028032
author Bushra Mushtaq
Muhammad Afzal
author_facet Bushra Mushtaq
Muhammad Afzal
author_sort Bushra Mushtaq
collection DOAJ
description This research paper analyzes the impact of women’s empowerment (WE) on green economic growth (GEG) and vulnerability to climate change (VCC) in South Asian countries for the period 1995-2023. This article contributes to the literature on the factors that influence GEG and VCC, and the significance of gender in adaptive policy. The econometric analysis based on the Cross-sectional Autoregressive Distributed Lag (CS-ARDL) model’s co-integration technique shows that (i) WE along with its components (women’s civil empowerment, social empowerment, political empowerment, and economic empowerment) reduces VCC and increases GEG via breaking barriers for women through diversity and inclusivity. (ii) The effect of WE on VCC is most pronounced by the notion of gender equality in climate adaptation (iii) The effect of WE on GEG is most pronounced by women’s leadership, mentoring, networking in multidisciplinary activities, and female human capital utilization through women’s entrepreneurial skills. Dumitrescu-Hurlin Granger causality test and Westerlund cointegration test have been used to explore causality and long-run cointegration among modeled variables. Policy implications are formulated on how a policy agenda, both regional and global, can be developed to promote climate resilience and GEG by promoting WE in the adaptive policy and decision-making processes.
format Article
id doaj-art-e2895c63498c44e094b0ee8ba15a545f
institution Kabale University
issn 2520-503X
2523-0026
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher National University of Sciences and Technology
record_format Article
series NUST Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities
spelling doaj-art-e2895c63498c44e094b0ee8ba15a545f2025-01-02T14:08:59ZengNational University of Sciences and TechnologyNUST Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities2520-503X2523-00262024-12-01103Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate ChangeBushra Mushtaq0Muhammad Afzal1Lecturer, Department of Economics, Lahore College for Women University, Lahoressistant Director, Crop Reporting Service, Agriculture Department, Government of Punjab This research paper analyzes the impact of women’s empowerment (WE) on green economic growth (GEG) and vulnerability to climate change (VCC) in South Asian countries for the period 1995-2023. This article contributes to the literature on the factors that influence GEG and VCC, and the significance of gender in adaptive policy. The econometric analysis based on the Cross-sectional Autoregressive Distributed Lag (CS-ARDL) model’s co-integration technique shows that (i) WE along with its components (women’s civil empowerment, social empowerment, political empowerment, and economic empowerment) reduces VCC and increases GEG via breaking barriers for women through diversity and inclusivity. (ii) The effect of WE on VCC is most pronounced by the notion of gender equality in climate adaptation (iii) The effect of WE on GEG is most pronounced by women’s leadership, mentoring, networking in multidisciplinary activities, and female human capital utilization through women’s entrepreneurial skills. Dumitrescu-Hurlin Granger causality test and Westerlund cointegration test have been used to explore causality and long-run cointegration among modeled variables. Policy implications are formulated on how a policy agenda, both regional and global, can be developed to promote climate resilience and GEG by promoting WE in the adaptive policy and decision-making processes. https://njssh.nust.edu.pk/index.php/njssh/article/view/207Women’s empowermentClimate ChangeGreen Economic GrowthVulnerability
spellingShingle Bushra Mushtaq
Muhammad Afzal
Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
NUST Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities
Women’s empowerment
Climate Change
Green Economic Growth
Vulnerability
title Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
title_full Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
title_fullStr Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
title_short Impact of Women's Empowerment on Green Economic Growth and Vulnerability to Climate Change
title_sort impact of women s empowerment on green economic growth and vulnerability to climate change
topic Women’s empowerment
Climate Change
Green Economic Growth
Vulnerability
url https://njssh.nust.edu.pk/index.php/njssh/article/view/207
work_keys_str_mv AT bushramushtaq impactofwomensempowermentongreeneconomicgrowthandvulnerabilitytoclimatechange
AT muhammadafzal impactofwomensempowermentongreeneconomicgrowthandvulnerabilitytoclimatechange