Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation

Rising temperatures and more extreme weather associated with climate change are expected to exacerbate existing social and gender inequalities across the globe. Climate change has differential effects on women and men: they are exposed to different climate shocks and experience different impacts rel...

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Autores principales: Huyer, Sophia, Gumucio, Tatiana
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Iris Publisher 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108861
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author Huyer, Sophia
Gumucio, Tatiana
author_browse Gumucio, Tatiana
Huyer, Sophia
author_facet Huyer, Sophia
Gumucio, Tatiana
author_sort Huyer, Sophia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rising temperatures and more extreme weather associated with climate change are expected to exacerbate existing social and gender inequalities across the globe. Climate change has differential effects on women and men: they are exposed to different climate shocks and experience different impacts related to gender differences in roles, rights, and opportunities. Women’s knowledge, networks, and assets are a significant aspect of resilience, but little attention is given to enabling their capacity as active agents. Instead the focus is on women as vulnerable victims of climate change. Evidence is emerging that adaptation and mitigation approaches in climate-resilient agriculture can and must reduce women’s and men’s vulnerabilities, promote their capacities for resilience, support women to exercise their agency, and, consequently, increase gender equality. Not only do we need to implement climate approaches that benefit women, we need to increase women’s resilience if we are going to effectively address and mitigate climate impacts. If we don’t, we will be on track to miss the 2 degree target – and at same time gender inequality will increase worldwide. A recent review of literature and regional case studies with researchers from four regions identified the critical dimensions of gender in/equality in climate-resilient agriculture. They are: (1) participation in decision-making at different levels, (2) work burden, (3) access to and use of productive resources such as agroclimatic information, technology, livelihood incomes, and credit, and (4) collective action. Models for action are presented that show how gender-responsive approaches can promote equality while increasing resilience for all.
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spelling CGSpace1088612025-11-11T19:08:30Z Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation Huyer, Sophia Gumucio, Tatiana gender climate women agency equality equity technology collective workload decision-making climate change agriculture food security Rising temperatures and more extreme weather associated with climate change are expected to exacerbate existing social and gender inequalities across the globe. Climate change has differential effects on women and men: they are exposed to different climate shocks and experience different impacts related to gender differences in roles, rights, and opportunities. Women’s knowledge, networks, and assets are a significant aspect of resilience, but little attention is given to enabling their capacity as active agents. Instead the focus is on women as vulnerable victims of climate change. Evidence is emerging that adaptation and mitigation approaches in climate-resilient agriculture can and must reduce women’s and men’s vulnerabilities, promote their capacities for resilience, support women to exercise their agency, and, consequently, increase gender equality. Not only do we need to implement climate approaches that benefit women, we need to increase women’s resilience if we are going to effectively address and mitigate climate impacts. If we don’t, we will be on track to miss the 2 degree target – and at same time gender inequality will increase worldwide. A recent review of literature and regional case studies with researchers from four regions identified the critical dimensions of gender in/equality in climate-resilient agriculture. They are: (1) participation in decision-making at different levels, (2) work burden, (3) access to and use of productive resources such as agroclimatic information, technology, livelihood incomes, and credit, and (4) collective action. Models for action are presented that show how gender-responsive approaches can promote equality while increasing resilience for all. 2020-07-20 2020-07-23T14:57:37Z 2020-07-23T14:57:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108861 en Open Access application/pdf Iris Publisher Huyer S, Gumucio T. 2020. Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation. World Journal of Agriculture and Soil Science 5(3):2020.
spellingShingle gender
climate
women
agency
equality
equity
technology
collective
workload
decision-making
climate change
agriculture
food security
Huyer, Sophia
Gumucio, Tatiana
Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title_full Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title_fullStr Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title_full_unstemmed Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title_short Going Back to the Well: Women, Agency, and Climate Adaptation
title_sort going back to the well women agency and climate adaptation
topic gender
climate
women
agency
equality
equity
technology
collective
workload
decision-making
climate change
agriculture
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108861
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