The document discusses a gender, agriculture and assets project being conducted in South Asia to evaluate the impacts of agricultural development programs on gender inequalities. It aims to understand what assets are important to men's and women's livelihoods, who has access and control over these assets, and how introduced technologies may affect asset access and control. The study will compare villages using introduced practices to non-user villages. Asset ownership and decision-making will be analyzed by gender, family type, and caste to understand differences. Initial findings show men typically control land and machinery while women often care for small livestock and make decisions on outputs. The use of pictures to discuss assets was an effective participatory method.