When you inform women, you transform lives | Paige Alexander

Episode Summary

The podcast discusses how providing information to women can transform their lives. It tells the story of Ana, a woman in Guatemala City who was on the verge of death after the loss of her husband. She had fallen into a depression, stopped eating, and lacked the energy to sell eggs to support her family. A neighbor told her about a nearby free women's clinic that could help. Ana went to the clinic, received treatment for malnutrition and mental health support. Now Ana and her daughters make tortillas in a small business that supports the family. Ana's life was saved by access to information. The podcast host argues that information is the closest thing we have to a silver bullet for solving problems globally. Information unlocks human rights for people. The Carter Center, where the host works, focuses on sharing information to match people's needs and wants. When surveying women globally, they found barriers like lower education levels, transportation challenges, and cultural norms that prevent women from accessing information. So they hired local liaisons to connect women with the information they need. This model was effective but needed to scale, so in 2021 during the pandemic they launched an "Inform Women Transform Lives" campaign. This large campaign across 5 continents and 35 cities aimed to give women access to city services they didn't know about before. The campaign used media like radio, murals, and social media to share information. The results showed an 86% increase in access to domestic violence resources in one city and a tenfold increase in calls to a domestic violence hotline in Nairobi after putting up a billboard. Hundreds of more examples showed how informing women transformed lives through entrepreneurship, health, safety, and more. The host shares this is personal to her as a mother of daughters who wants to carry on the work of empowering women done by figures like Rosalynn Carter. Providing women access to information allows them to transform their lives in incredible ways. When you inform women, you transform lives.

Episode Show Notes

Access to information is the key to unlocking human rights for all, says equality champion Paige Alexander. From educating female entrepreneurs on how to launch life-sustaining businesses to murals, billboards and other creative ways of sharing vital resources, Alexander shares how she and her team at the Carter Center connect people to the information they need — when they need it the most.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_01: TED Audio Collective SPEAKER_00: You're listening to TED Talks Daily. I'm your host, Elise Hu. It turns out there's a rather simple solution to getting women life-changing support, whether it's healthcare, safety from domestic abuse situations, or access to educational programs. Once the Carter Center identified it, CEO Paige Alexander says they were able to transform lives. Her 2023 talk from 10 Women reveals this game changer after the break. Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Capital One Bank. With no fees or minimums, banking with Capital One is the easiest decision in the history of decisions. Even easier than deciding to listen to another episode of your favorite podcast. And with no overdraft fees, is it even a decision? That's banking reimagined. What's in your wallet? Terms apply. See CapitalOne.com slash Bank Capital One N-A member FDIC. Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Odoo. If you feel like you're wasting time and money with your current business software, or just want to know what you could be missing, then you need to join the millions of other users who switched to Odoo. Odoo is the affordable, all-in-one management software with a library of fully integrated business applications that help you get more done in less time for a fraction of the price. To learn more, visit Odoo.com slash TED Talks. That's O-D-O-O dot com slash TED Talks. Odoo. Modern management made simple. Hey, before we get to the rest of the episode, we just want to thank you for listening to TED Talks Daily. It means a lot that we're part of your daily routine. If you're not already following us, you can follow us on Amazon Music, where you can find TED Talks Daily and all your TED favorites. SPEAKER_01: So this is Ana. Four years ago in Guatemala City, she was literally at death's door. Her husband had died. She had fallen into a deep depression. She had stopped eating. She didn't have the stamina to walk door to door to sell the eggs, which is what was supporting her family. Her daughters walked helplessly as she gave every last penny she had to them. Until a neighbor said, right down the street, there's a city-run free women's clinic where you can get help. And that conversation changed her life. She went to the center. They treated her for malnutrition. They gave her the mental health care she needed and other health support. And now Ana and her two daughters make tortillas in a small women-owned business, and that's enough to support her family. Ana was saved by information. So you hear that story and you probably think, another nice NGO doing some good work around the world. But when I hear that story, I think how the right information at the right time actually saved a woman's life. That information saved Ana's life. At the Carter Center, we work in global health and peace around the world. And I've been in the business long enough to know that there is no silver bullet to solving our world's problems. But the closest thing we have is access to information. And I consider that a master key because it unlocks human rights for everyone around the world. And it's because of that that Ana's life and many other women's lives were saved. So when you work for President Carter, you spend a lot of time thinking about human rights. And when your other boss is Rosalynn Carter, you spend a lot of time thinking about women's rights. My favorite thing on Mrs. Carter's desk is a picture that she keeps of a group of women in front of the White House in 1977, protesting against the Equal Rights Amendment. And when I asked her, why do you keep that on your desk? She said because she wanted to be reminded of the work that she had left to do. Now, you don't have to be a former president of the United States or a former first lady to understand the power of sharing information. Honestly, obviously, the platform does not hurt. But what we do now is we look at how we match information needs with information wants that exist. So when we talk to President Carter about the fact that there's a gap between how men and women receive information, we ask very specifically, we want to run a program on this, but he is a very disciplined engineer. And he said it's an interesting thesis, but can you prove it and can you come up with a program that's actually going to make a difference? So not working on anecdotal information, we decided to survey about 2,000 women, people in Guatemala, Liberia, Bangladesh. And we wanted to ask government offices, are women seeking information? And so when you go into a government office, you'll find women who might be sitting there if they brave the odds, but they're being ignored, they're being questioned or they're actually being derided. And so we thought, what are the barriers to finding this information for women? Well, we all know data literacy and illiteracy is greater among women. They have less chance of education. Transportation can be very difficult. You look at gender norms and cultural norms, often women are responsible for not only full-time childcare, but also raising the family and working. And it also can be very dangerous if they take transportation on their own. SPEAKER_01: And so one government office building, we noticed that there were no women's bathrooms. So if anyone had gone in to try to seek the information, they were there all day without a restroom. So we thought, what can we do to change the situation? So we decided that all politics is local and all development is local. And so we hired local information liaisons to help connect the dots for women to get the information they needed. For example, in Dhaka, in Bangladesh, there was a woman who wanted to get a street lamp in her slum, but her father had said, don't ask for the information. This is not your position. You won't get it. So when the street lamp showed up, he was incredibly proud of her. And in Liberia, a group of women came together and they sought information on county development funds. And with that money, they were able to open a soap business. And that created an entire community of women entrepreneurs. So it's great to do this one information liaison at a time, but the reality is we wanted to scale up. So in 2021, in the middle of the pandemic, we decided to start a campaign called Inform Women Transform Lives. And it was to connect women with the information that was out there that they did not have. So we're now on five continents across 35 different cities from Atlanta to Chicago, from Dublin to Rotterdam, from Simpolo to Kathmandu. And it hits 215 million people, 215 million citizens who can be affected by information through the city's programs. So this is how it works. We start with the city. We find a city service that women have access to, but they don't know about it because they haven't been told. And then we run radio jingles, we do murals, we do transit ads, we use social media, and we get them the information. We meet women where they are. So it seems quite simple, and the results were real. In Simpolo, there was an 86 percent uptick in the information that was received for gender-based violence and domestic violence. In Nairobi, we were able to put the sign up that actually was a hotline for women who wanted help on domestic violence. Before this billboard went up, there were 10 calls to that hotline. After this billboard went up, there were 500 calls. That's 490 women who needed the assistance the month before but didn't even know it existed. In Cape Town, we brought women together from a township, we brought them to the public library, we had the city talk about how to access information services, and there was an uptick in everything from requests for street cleaning to COVID vaccinations. And in Kampala, women were able to get increased loans so women entrepreneurs could start. In Chicago, the benefit of having a city key card was something that many women didn't know about until we started the campaign. It serves as a government ID, a health prescription card, a transit card, a public library card, and there was a 225 percent uptick in requests for the city of Chicago. And then here in Atlanta, we have a program that we call Safe Spots. It's a program that the city started to create in fire stations a safe spot for women and children who are going through domestic abuse to enter. The fire station shuts down, the immediate assistance is given to the person who needs it, and it's very difficult to walk into a police station if you're in a domestic abuse situation. But fire stations, we've all been to, we've all sat there, we've rang the bell, people feel more comfortable. And we always have to check our assumptions because the reality is we thought this was going to be something that was used in the lower-income parts of town, but in fact, the data shows that in the more affluent areas, people are walking into those fire stations as safe spots. So we all do our work for very different reasons. I will tell you that I am the daughter of an incredibly amazing woman who taught me I could be anything that my three older brothers could be. I am now a mother of two amazing daughters who are incredibly independent and a very well-trained and sensitized teenage son. We need more of those. And often it's my vision of Mrs. Carter's picture that is sitting on her desk, reminding me that for 40 years she looked at that picture and she knew that that was work that still needed to be done. Or, of course, it could be the fact that President Carter, who is 99 and still cares deeply about this issue, when he was 89, at the spry age of 89, he wrote a book on women's issues and human rights, and he gave a talk at TED Women. He has always taught me that wherever we go in the world, people are intelligent, they care about their families, they're hardworking, but they often just don't have the information that they need to be successful. And so it's my job, it's all of our jobs, to help women get that information, because it's really quite simple. When you inform women, you transform lives. Thank you.