Practice

Representative Leadership

The leadership of the Inclusive IPS should meaningfully reflect the diversity of the populations it serves by ensuring women—especially from marginalized backgrounds—are intentionally included, represented, and empowered in decision-making roles and encouraging participants to do the same.

Inclusive Governance

Scheme offers equal ownership opportunities to DFSPs, and input mechanisms to all participants

How to Implement

Guidance

Aim for gender balance in Scheme leadership and staff.

The Scheme aims for not just token participation, but gender-balanced representation at all levels of the organization, including leadership (executive, board, and advisory levels) and staff. A gender-balanced Scheme will reflect the gender demographics of its market.

Insist on women’s voice in decision making.

In leadership positions, the Scheme insists that women leaders have actual authority, not symbolic roles. This means voting power on boards, leadership over key portfolios, influence over strategic direction not just corporate social responsibility (CSR) and gender equity programs.

Codify inclusive institutional culture.

The Scheme codifies policies and practices that ensure leadership pathways are accessible to women.

Provide structural mechanisms for women’s inclusion.

The Scheme may set targets to increase inclusion of women in boards, senior management, and teams throughout the organization.

Why It Matters

Representative leadership results in improved system and ecosystem outcomes. improved commercial and social returns, greater innovation, improved risk management, governance, and crisis resilience.

Seeing More Clearly

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Women’s Inclusion

Women’s meaningful participation in Scheme and DFSP leadership roles has demonstrated returns that benefit the ecosystem. These include greater Scheme and DFSP scale and sustainability, increased product and service innovation, higher institutional resilience, ecosystem financial stability, and higher financial and social returns on investment.

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Tools

Design Guides

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Related Resources

From the Community

Helpful resources from other organizations on implementing this practice.

    Women’s World Banking

    Advancing Women as Leaders in Nigeria’s Finance Industry

    Report on representative leadership interventions in Nigeria

    PDF | Women’s World Banking

    How Inclusive Leadership Contributes to Women’s Financial Inclusion

    Policy brief describing the impact of women leadership on women’s economic inclusion

    PDF | World Bank

    Women in Business Leadership Boost ESG Performance: Existing Body of Evidence Makes Compelling Case

    Summary of evidence for improved corporate governance with women leadership

Explore more practices

Review other L1P practices and learn more about how to apply them to your IPS.

A woman uses mobile money to purchase fruit at a market in Rwanda.