Planning to economically empower women in debt through civil society institutions

Author

Lecturer of Social Planning - Faculty of Social Work - Aswan University

Abstract

The aim of the current study was to: identify aspects of empowering women in economic distress, identify obstacles to women in debt benefiting from the economic services provided by civil society institutions, and determine the role of civil society institutions in empowering women in economic distress. It was applied to a non-random sample of (50) women in debt who are at risk of imprisonment and who are subject to imprisonment. They were released from prison, and a questionnaire was used as a tool to collect data.
The study reached several results, the most important of which were: that it was a reality The fact that debtors benefit from the economic services provided by the institution is (low), and that the reality of the obstacles to fined women benefiting from the economic services provided by the institution (medium), and that the reality of the elements of enabling fined women to benefit from the economic services provided by the institution (high), and that the reality of the reasons for the institutions’ inability to Empowerment of fines economically (high), and the most important of these reasons were: the lack of donations coming to institutions, and the reality of proposals to increase the capacity Institutions to empower debtors economically (high), and the most important of these proposals were: paying all or some of the debts owed by debtors.

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