What is Women’s Psychosocial Agency?
Women’s Psychosocial Agency (WOPSA) is a process through which women feel, think, and relate as capable and entitled individuals who are free to pursue their own well-being in life within their given environment, which includes being aware of both obstacles they face and resources they have. It is referred to as psychosocial because it covers both psychological and sociological considerations, meaning that the agency process takes place individually and internally, but each person lives in a specific environment that influences the obstacles they face and resources they have available.
As agency is a process that happens internally at the individual level, it cannot be directly measured. The WOPSA framework is comprised of three dimensions and their respective factors to be able to obtain valid and reliable measures of psychosocial agency.
The Emotional Dimension is comprised of feelings and assessments one has about oneself, and perceptions of effectiveness in controlling one’s own capabilities. It is made up of three factors: Self-efficacy, Self-esteem, Time control satisfaction.
The Cognitive Dimension refers to the ability to establish one’s own objectives and awareness of obstacles and resources in oneself and their environment. It has two factors: Goal setting and Awareness of obstacles and resources.
The Relational Dimension is made up of attitudes and perceptions about one’s ability to help others and be useful in the community. It includes three factors: Helping others, Leadership and Influence in the community.
Agency is not static. In transformative agency building processes, individuals experience through what are referred to as subjective processes: the internal and personal experiences, such as thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and attitudes, that a person lives through at a specific time and context. By identifying these processes, we can begin to understand whether and which social norms, values, and beliefs are internalized and shifted. In this framework, we focus on subjective processes related to agency, and its three subdimensions, namely emotional, relational, and cognitive agency.