Analysis by Burnett Munthali
The second edition of Malawi’s Women’s Manifesto presents a powerful call to action that captures the evolving demands of Malawian women and girls in the fight for equality, justice, and inclusion.
This revised edition integrates new thematic areas such as digital justice and women’s role in the fight against corruption, recognizing the impact of emerging challenges on gender equity.
In addition to enforcing advocacy around education, health, economic empowerment, leadership, and access to justice, the manifesto now incorporates stronger commitments to environmental sustainability and climate resilience.

It also pushes for systemic reforms in governance by addressing intersectional vulnerabilities, including those affecting marginalized women and persons with disabilities.
The document underscores the urgency of holistic policy transformation, arguing that piecemeal interventions can no longer meet the scale of gender inequality in Malawi.
Through these comprehensive revisions, the Women’s Manifesto movement reaffirms its dedication to advancing gender-sensitive policies and ensuring meaningful accountability from duty bearers at all levels.
The manifesto’s demands are organized around several thematic areas, beginning with women and economic empowerment on page 4.
It argues that women’s economic empowerment is essential for poverty reduction and sustainable development in Malawi.
Despite existing legal frameworks and policies, enforcement remains weak due to funding gaps, limited dissemination, and inadequate gender-sensitive programs.
The document calls for urgent policy action to remove structural barriers and create inclusive economic opportunities for women across the country.
A second focus is on women, land, water, and natural resources, where Malawian women face significant challenges due to cultural biases and structural inequalities.
Customary reliance practices limit women’s ownership and control, with tenure security particularly weak in patrilineal societies, leading to economic insecurity.
In water access, rural women spend excessive time collecting water, which affects productivity, health, and education outcomes.
Poor sanitation compounds these risks, while in the mining sector women struggle with a lack of transparency, financial resources, and opportunities for value addition.
This exclusion keeps them from benefiting fully from natural resource management and broader economic growth.
The third thematic area addresses women and climate change, noting that Malawi has policies and international commitments to combat the crisis.
However, women and girls are disproportionately affected due to fragile ecosystems, reliance on rain-fed agriculture, and limited adaptive capacity.
Extreme weather events like droughts and floods disproportionately affect women, leading to food insecurity, risky coping mechanisms, and restricted access to education and healthcare.
Climate change also worsens mental health among vulnerable women, while climate-induced disasters expose them to increased risks of gender-based violence, including sexual exploitation, abuse, and harassment.
These abuses are perpetrated by intimate partners, community members, human traffickers, emergency responders, and humanitarian personnel.
Limited resources for disaster response mean women face poor security, inadequate sanitation, and increased gender-based violence, while recovery efforts remain weak and under-resourced.
The manifesto highlights that women have low representation in decision-making structures and limited access to early warning systems, worsening their vulnerability to climate risk.
A fourth area examines women and agriculture, despite Malawi’s strong legal and policy commitments to achieving food security and promoting agriculture for economic growth.
A significant gender gap persists, with women constituting 70% of the agricultural labor force but remaining on average 28% less productive than male counterparts.
This disparity significantly hinders the nation’s progress toward its agricultural and developmental goals, including those outlined in Malawi 2063 and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The productivity gap is driven by systemic challenges: lower education levels, lesser control over land and natural resources, reduced labor availability, disproportionate caregiving responsibilities, and minimal access to financial resources, information, and technology.
Collectively, these sections signal a shift in Malawi’s gender advocacy from a narrow focus on welfare to a broader demand for systemic change across the digital, environmental, and governance spaces.
The second edition positions the Women’s Manifesto not only as a policy checklist but as a political instrument for holding leaders accountable ahead of and beyond elections.
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