An institutional development perspective on prepaid solar electrification and gender relations in rural off-grid communities

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Title
An institutional development perspective on prepaid solar electrification and gender relations in rural off-grid communities

CoPED ID
6faccfc7-ab30-4aaa-9096-460d1f6e7459

Status
Closed


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Jan. 1, 2017

End Date
April 30, 2023

Description

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The goal of this research project is to understand the extent and ways in which prepaid electricity services impact on gender relations in rural low-income communities. Prepaid solar electrification is the provision of renewable energy on a
pay-as-you-go basis for people without electricity access. This emerging and highly topical electrification strategy aims to break down financial barriers that exclude so many people from efficient, effective and safe energy access. Currently
1.6billion people lack electricity access worldwide. Studies show that prepaid solar electricity is likely to have a large impact on the lives of women, as they spend the majority of their time at home, caring for the family. As yet, however, little
is understood about the extent of this impact and the ways in which it may occur, either in practice or in theory. Therefore, it is anticipated that by gaining an understanding of how prepaid electricity impacts gender relations in practice, analysed using a synthesis of concepts from science and technology studies (STS), gender studies and institutional development theory, this investigation can identify ways to maximize beneficial development outcomes for women from rural
electrification programmes and advance theory in this field.
Fieldwork will require partnership with a prepaid solar energy provider in Tanzania or Kenya and involve the collection of primary research material in two key forms: semi-structured interviews and focus groups. This will require two trips, each
estimated to take approximately three months. Semi-structured interviews will be conducted with a selection of rural prepaid electricity customers before and during their use of the service, as well as a selection of people who are not using the service at all. These comparisons of time and situation are necessary to establish the validity of proposed links between gender relation development and the use of prepaid electricity. It is important to acknowledge changes that would have occurred anyway, regardless of this intervention. Semi-structured interviews have been chosen to allow for both structure and flexibility within the interviewee researcher dynamic. The data captured from the interviews will be qualitative, based on concepts synthesized from the literatures mentioned above. The questions will be set by the researcher and tailored based on the interviewee's responses, thereby benefitting from iterative learning within each conversation.
Focus groups will be used to explore likely subtle changes in gender relations and evidence for them. The groups will take a number of forms in order to compare perceptions between different segments of the prepaid energy consumer
population, as well as invite different group dynamics for sharing. By systematically comparing different viewpoints and experiences, this methodology aims to draw robust and well-considered findings. It also hopes to capture the contested
and negotiated nature of gender relation development. Focus groups have been chosen because they act as relaxed group interviews, enabling interaction and discussion within a group of people, with the researcher acting as moderator.

University of Sussex LEAD_ORG
Kingo COLLAB_ORG

Robert Byrne SUPER_PER
Theodora-Ismene Gizelis SUPER_PER
David Ockwell SUPER_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Gender
  2. Interviews
  3. Gender research
  4. Interview study
  5. Electrification
  6. Women
  7. Developing countries
  8. Solar energy
  9. Research
  10. Countryside

Extracted key phrases
  1. Prepaid electricity service impact
  2. Gender relation development
  3. Rural prepaid electricity customer
  4. Prepaid solar electricity
  5. Prepaid solar electrification
  6. Prepaid solar energy provider
  7. Institutional development perspective
  8. Institutional development theory
  9. Prepaid energy consumer
  10. Gender study
  11. Beneficial development outcome
  12. Electricity access
  13. Relaxed group interview
  14. Different group dynamic
  15. Topical electrification strategy

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations