The single most important paper on this topic, and the one every other reading here is in conversation with. Kabeer defines empowerment as the expansion in the ability to make strategic life choices by those previously denied it, and insists that resources, agency and achievements are indivisible — you cannot read a measure of one as a measure of the others. Read it before you write a single indicator.
Measuring Empowerment
Beyond income: agency, autonomy, and the trouble with proxies — a working reading list for evaluators measuring something that resists measurement.
"Empowerment" is the most demanded and least defined word in a gender results framework. The temptation is to reach for a proxy that sits conveniently in a household survey — a woman's years of schooling, her wage, whether she "participates" in a decision — and call the job done. But income is not agency, and a tick-box about decision-making tells you little about whether a woman could have chosen otherwise. Naila Kabeer's Resources, Agency, Achievements remains the indispensable starting point precisely because it refuses to let those three things collapse into one another: resources are the pre-conditions of choice, agency is the process of exercising it, and achievements are the outcomes — and an indicator is only valid if you can specify which one it is measuring and why.
The field has since built ambitious instruments to operationalise this. The Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) and its project-level successor pro-WEAI translate "intrinsic, instrumental and collective agency" into survey modules used across dozens of countries; the SWPER index repurposes existing Demographic and Health Survey data so empowerment can be tracked at population scale. These are real advances. They are also where the trouble lives: an index makes empowerment comparable across contexts only by deciding, in advance and from outside, what counts — and a woman's reported "decision-making power" can rise on a survey while the norms that constrain her do not budge an inch.
This list holds both ambitions in tension. Read Kabeer, Rowlands, and Sen first for the concepts; read the WEAI, SWPER, and ICRW materials to see how the concepts get turned into numbers; and read Cornwall, the Malhotra–Schuler synthesis, and the Lancet critiques to stay alert to the gap between an indicator that moves and a life that changes.
Conceptual Foundations
What empowerment actually is — the texts that define agency, choice, and power before anyone tries to count them.
The clearest short treatment of power as the root concept. Rowlands distinguishes "power over" from "power to," "power with," and "power within," and shows that empowerment has personal, relational and collective dimensions that no single household-level indicator can capture. The three-part agency typology later adopted by pro-WEAI is essentially this framework operationalised.
The capability-approach foundation beneath almost all of this work. Sen's distinction between well-being and agency — a person's ability to act on what they have reason to value — is why "more income" cannot stand in for "more empowered." His chapter on women's agency and social change is the bridge from abstract capability theory to gender measurement.
Measurement Frameworks
The syntheses that turn the concept into a measurement strategy — what to measure, at what level, and how to respect context while staying comparable.
The reference synthesis commissioned by the World Bank's Gender and Development Group. It maps empowerment across dimensions (economic, socio-cultural, familial, legal, political, psychological) and levels (household, community, broader arenas), and proposes the field's standard solution to the comparability problem: hold the conceptual framework constant, let the indicators flex by context.
The OPHI founder's review of how psychology has actually measured self-direction, autonomy and self-efficacy at scale. Essential reading for anyone tempted to invent their own "agency" question: Alkire surveys the validated instruments that already exist and what they can and cannot tell you. Pair with her work with Ibrahim on internationally comparable agency indicators.
The most usable practitioner framework for the economic slice specifically. ICRW separates reach (did the resource arrive?) from economic advancement and agency, with illustrative indicators for each — a concrete antidote to the habit of treating a credit disbursement or a wage as proof of empowerment.
Kabeer returns to her own framework to interrogate the MDG3 indicators — education, employment, political seats — and shows where each is a plausible route to agency and where it is merely a convenient proxy that can move without empowerment following. The cleanest worked example of reasoning from concept to indicator and back.
Instruments at Scale
The survey tools now used across dozens of countries — where the conceptual debates become questionnaire items, weights, and aggregation rules.
The first standardised, direct measure of women's empowerment in the agricultural sector, launched in 2012 and since used by 230+ organisations across 58 countries. Its dual structure — five domains of empowerment plus a household Gender Parity Index — is the most influential attempt to make agency comparable across settings. Start at the project hub, then read the underlying methodology.
The project-level revision, and the clearest place to see Rowlands' power typology turned into numbers: its twelve indicators map onto intrinsic agency (power within), instrumental agency (power to) and collective agency (power with). Notable for bundling qualitative tools so projects can surface local definitions of empowerment before fixing the quantitative items.
A different strategy: rather than fielding a bespoke survey, SWPER derives a women's empowerment index from items already in Demographic and Health Surveys, across three dimensions (attitudes to intimate-partner violence, social independence, decision-making). Its appeal is scale and time-trend comparability; its limitation is that you are measuring whatever the DHS happened to ask. Later expanded as SWPER Global.
Critiques & the Trouble with Proxies
Why a moving indicator is not a changed life — the writers who keep the measurement project honest about norms, instrumentalism, and context.
Drawing on the Pathways of Women's Empowerment programme, Cornwall warns that mainstreaming has hollowed the concept into instrumental gains — what women can do for development rather than what development does for women. A useful corrective for any measurement exercise that has quietly redefined empowerment as whatever the programme can deliver.
A short, pointed commentary published alongside the SWPER index, cautioning that a standardised score can mislead when the same questionnaire item means different things in different normative settings. The best one-page statement of why cross-country empowerment comparisons demand interpretive humility, not just psychometric rigour.
Kabeer's own archive, with open-access PDFs of the 1999 and 2005 papers above plus newer work on paid work, social protection and collective agency in South Asia. The best single place to follow how the field's foundational thinker has revised her own framework over twenty-five years of fieldwork.
A practitioner gateway that curates the frameworks above alongside method choices for evaluating empowerment programmes. Useful when you have settled on what to measure and need help deciding how — qualitative, mixed-method or index-based — without losing the conceptual thread.
ImpactMojo Editorial (2026). "Measuring Empowerment." ImpactMojo Deep Dives. Retrieved from https://impactmojo.in/DeepDives/measuring-empowerment.html
Want to curate a Deep Dive?
If you teach, research, or practice in development and have a reading list worth sharing — pitch us.
Pitch a Deep Dive →