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SPECIAL REPORT Leadership to produce strong female leaders through training in workforce leadership skills; and (3) develop sustainable alliances between the UNA’s School of Agricultural Sciences, civil society, and the public and private sector that promote the emergence of female leaders. The three-year project was implemented in Paraguay in collaboration with various partner organizations. The Women’s Leadership Program in Paraguay implemented eleven initiatives that were contextualized to fi t the local reality by addressing the needs of faculty and students and available resources. It developed new programs and centers such as the Career Center (Centro de Desarrollo Laboral); the Mentoring and AgroLeadership programs; the internship opportunities for students in the agricultural sciences program; coordination with public and private organizations; and the partnerships with agricultural high schools in the rural areas of the country. The partnership program also provided gender awareness workshops targeting students and administrators at four agricultural schools in San Pedro, Belen, Cerrito and Mbaracayú. These schools are In Paraguay, where women in rural areas earn the lowest wages, and face greater societal obstacles to attain the knowledge and skills necessary for the workforce, access to higher education is a great challenge. Education alone may not address issues of gender inequality and women’s empowerment, as two other simultaneous conditions must be present: “women’s participation and equal opportunity in the public sphere and women’s diff erential needs in the private sphere, particularly those concerning reproductive rights, childcare and the violence they may experience in domestic settings.” (Stromquist, 2006:154). 14 The WLPP strived to provide leadership and gender training with the aim of preparing women and men to develop the skills, knowledge and attitudes to pursue leadership positions in the communities where they live and work. The program provided resources for women and indigenous people to access better opportunities in education, job training and the workforce. A total of 2,308 people were direct benefi ciaries of the activities implemented by the Women’s Leadership Program in Paraguay.  * Author is a Senior Research Associate at the Learning Systems Institute at the Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida. She is an international education and development specialist. Girls from the school walk through the forest. Part of their education focuses on the importance of preservation and reforestation. managed by Fundación Paraguaya and Fundación Moises Bertoni. The mentoring program to support female students and create stronger linkages between the high schools, universities, and professional associations has been one of the most eff ective initiatives established by the partnership. Another success of UF-UNA partnership was the curricular revision of the fi ve disciplines that make up the academic programs of the college of agricultural sciences (Agronomic Engineering, Forest Engineering, Human Ecology Engineering, Degree in Agricultural Management, and Environmental Engineering). A concrete achievement was the development of the gender policy, and the introduction of the ‘gender’ subject in each of those fi ve disciplines, resulting in a new elective course: “Gender and Interculturalism,” listed in the UNA/FCA 2015 Course Catalog. 14 References: DevTech Systems, Inc. USAID/Paraguay Gender Assessment (2011). USAID Bur. for Economic Growth, Agriculture and Trade. Ofc. of Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment. Washington, DC. Kabeer, N., (2001) ‘Resources, Agency, Achievements: Refl ections on the Measurement of Women’s Empowerment’, pp 17-59 in Discussing Women’s Empowerment - Theory and Practice’, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, Stockholm, Sweden Malhotra, A. 2003. Conceptualizing and Measuring Women’s Empowerment as a Variable in International Development. Medel-Anonuevo, Carolyn and Bettina Bochynek (1995). The International Seminar on Women’s Education and Empowerment, in Women, Education and Empowerment: Pathways towards Autonomy edited by Carolyn Medel-Anonuevo. UNESCO Institute for Education Studies 5, 1995: Hamburg, Germany. Ramos, F. (2007). Life’s Structures and the Individual’s Voice: Making Sense of Women’s Words. In “The structure and agency of women’s education,” edited by Mary Ann Maslak. Albany: State University of New York Press. Ramos, F. (2007). “Imaginary pictures, real life stories: The FotoDialogo method,” International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 20 (2) March-April 2007, pp. 191-224. Ramos-Mattoussi, F. & Caballero, V. (July 2015). External Evaluation of the Women’s Leadership Program in Paraguay: Evaluation Report. [174 p.] Higher Education for Development (HED), American Council on Education (ACE). USAID/DEC, Washington, DC. Stromquist, N. P. (2002) Education as a means for empowering women, in: J. Parpart, S. Rai & K. Staudt (Eds) Rethinking empowerment. Gender and development in a global/local world (London, Routledge), 22–38. Stromquist, N. P. (2006) Gender, education and the possibility of transformative knowledge. Compare, 36:2, 145-161. Stromquist, N. P. (2006) Gender, education and the possibility of transformative knowledge. Compare, 36:2, 145-161. PARAGUAY 2019 • 33