[{"bbox": [68, 100, 1172, 460], "category": "Table", "text": "<table><tr><td>Planning Process</td><td>Misperception that the Project is s increasing incidence of VAWG due to increased reporting</td><td>Medium</td><td>Low</td><td>The action will work closely with community leaders, including local authorities to clarify the link between the project and increased reporting. Implementing partners (IP) will also emphasize the benefits of increased reporting in breaking the culture of silence associated with GBV.</td></tr><tr><td>Planning Process</td><td>Safeguarding risks through threats to service providers along the referral continuum from perpetrators of GBV</td><td>Low</td><td>Low</td><td>The action will advocate with police, elected representative, local officials in project sites to take responsibility for the safety of project staff and service providers. Targeted advocacy with local governments to institute safeguards/ protocols to protect service providers; and training of all service providers on working with perpetrators to reduce the risk of violence will be prioritised</td></tr></table>"}, {"bbox": [78, 461, 1167, 993], "category": "Text", "text": "**Lessons Learnt:** Sectoral silos and programmatic fragmentation represent a major challenge of GEWE programming. To counter this, integration is a foundational principle of this action, with integrated result areas and strong focus on joint targeting, delivery and monitoring across pillars. Specific lessons underpinning this joint programme include:\n**Multi-sectoral, coordinated GBV response:** Coordination and service delivery for justice, economic empowerment, social protection, care for children survivors and psycho-social support need to be strengthened. **Norm change with men and boys:** supporting social change through strategic and continuous engagement with men and boys to address hegemonic masculinities, subordination and marginalization. **Intersectionality:** addressing women and girls' specific life-cycle transitions and risks as well as the diversity of women, girls and LGBTIQ+ persons' experiences. **Economic empowerment underpinning GEWE programming,** as an important tool to build self-esteem, autonomy, increase agency and unlock opportunities for women. Moreover, market-based approaches for improving working conditions and value chain development can facilitate the economic inclusion of vulnerable and excluded groups sustainably. **Social protection as a safety net:** new programmes have to address exclusion errors, which remain high, preventing programmes from reaching most vulnerable populations. **Civil society has a pivotal role in amplifying women, girls and marginalised groups' voices and holding duty bearers to account. Implementation, monitoring and accountability:** Strengthening gender-responsive rule of law processes including enhanced oversight mechanisms, more robust evidence and data processes, and gender-responsive budgeting. **Federalism is a strategic entry point to support inclusive governance and women's leadership. Nexus between humanitarian and development actions:** Lessons emerging from past emergencies and the ongoing COVID 19 pandemics underscore the need for agile institutions, the necessity to factor in the multi-hazard context of Nepal to support adaptive GEWE programming for sustainable, context-relevant gender equality and social justice outcomes."}, {"bbox": [136, 1010, 465, 1042], "category": "Section-header", "text": "### 3.5. The Intervention Logic"}, {"bbox": [82, 1054, 1167, 1135], "category": "Text", "text": "The action seeks to address the underlying drivers of gender inequality. Drawing on the Gender@Work conceptual framework, it is articulated around three interlinked overall specific objectives aiming at realising the full realisation of Nepalese women and girls' human rights."}, {"bbox": [82, 1136, 1167, 1400], "category": "Text", "text": "The intervention logic for this action is **If women/girls in all their diversity, are safe, valued and have increased voice, choice and control to challenge/transform harmful social norms; If women, men, girls and boys, in all their diversity, fully enjoy and exercise their equal economic, labour and social rights; If institutions deliver gender equality outcomes in all spheres, in line with international and national normative frameworks; then, better enjoyment of human rights by all Nepali women and girls will be achieved because an enabling environment for inclusive governance, non-discrimination, economic autonomy, decent work, shock responsive social protection and a violence-free society will have been created through profound changes in institutional capacities and practices, social norms, laws, policies and direct improvements in women's and girls' economic, social and political influence, across the conflict-development-humanitarian continuum, while promoting environmental sustainability and increasing resilience to climate change and natural disasters.**"}, {"bbox": [82, 1401, 1167, 1508], "category": "Text", "text": "This will be achieved through strategic actions addressing the structural and societal barriers hampering women and girls' participation, access to and control over productive labour and resources, safe access to gender-responsive services and decision-making platforms as well as protection against the continued risks of violence, exclusion and discrimination women and girls continue to face in the home, family and workplace."}, {"bbox": [1039, 1662, 1157, 1686], "category": "Page-footer", "text": "Page 11 of 22"}]