Authors
Cathy Rozel Farnworth, Frédéric Baudron, Jens A Andersson, Michael Misiko, Lone Badstue, Clare M Stirling
Publication date
2016/4/2
Source
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability
Volume
14
Issue
2
Pages
142-165
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
It is remarkable that despite wide-ranging, in-depth studies over many years, almost no conservation agriculture (CA) studies consider gender and gender relations as a potential explanatory factor for (low) adoption rates. This is important because CA demands new ways of working with the farm system. Implementation will inevitably involve a reallocation of men's and women's resources as well as having an impact upon their ability to realize their gender interests. With respect to intra-household decision-making and the distribution of benefits, CA interventions have implications for labour requirements and labour allocation, investment decisions with respect to mechanization and herbicide use, crop choice, and residue management. CA practice may impact upon the ability of households to source a wide variety of crops, wild plants, and insects and small animals for household nutrition. Gender biases in extension …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CR Farnworth, F Baudron, JA Andersson, M Misiko… - International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 2016