Welcome to Helen's Daughters

What Grows Together, Goes Together

We use Agriculture as an entry-point for overall development!

Helen’s Daughters works at a grassroots level providing capacity-development training, mentorship, micro-investment, access to high-value markets and a structured care-system for rural women farmers, who have largely been unacknowledged and under-supported in the agricultural sector.

On the advocacy front, the organization leverages the media and partnerships with the public and private sectors to address gender inequalities by seeking opportunities for female farmers, as well as putting food security and climate resilience in the public and policy agenda. In this way, Helen’s Daughters is positioning rural women as key actors in driving sustainable development in the Caribbean.

What We Do

Education and Capacity Building

Equip women in agriculture with training, knowledge, and skills to strengthen their capacity and leadership.

Economic Development and Wealth Creation/ Economic Security

Improve women’s access to capital to support economic security, enterprise growth, and wealth creation.

Agricultural Resources Access and Mobilization

Increase women’s access to agricultural inputs, tools, technical support, and recovery assistance in times of crisis.

Community and Movement Building

Foster safe spaces for women to connect, share experiences, build relationships, and reshape the narrative around agriculture, women, and food.

Advocacy, Representation and Visibility

Elevate women’s voices, strengthen their advocacy, and advance gender-responsive and equitable agricultural policies.

Operational Efficiency and Governance

Strengthen systems, governance, and organizational culture to ensure long-term sustainability and attract and retain high-quality talent.

Who We Are

For more information on Our Team, please click the button below.

"We advance economic justice for women in the Caribbean region by supporting women farmers to engage in sustainable agriculture and removing the barriers for their market participation."​