Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience

"Key Messages - Women in food systems tend to be more negatively impacted by climate risks than men as they are more dependent on agriculture as well as more constrained in responding and adapting to changes in climate because of structural socio-economic inequalities.  - Identifying climate–agricul...

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Main Authors: Puskur, Ranjitha, Lecoutere, Els
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120017
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author Puskur, Ranjitha
Lecoutere, Els
author_browse Lecoutere, Els
Puskur, Ranjitha
author_facet Puskur, Ranjitha
Lecoutere, Els
author_sort Puskur, Ranjitha
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description "Key Messages - Women in food systems tend to be more negatively impacted by climate risks than men as they are more dependent on agriculture as well as more constrained in responding and adapting to changes in climate because of structural socio-economic inequalities.  - Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots, where climate hazards converge with large concentrations of women participating in food systems and significant structural gender inequalities, enables allocating scarce resources to most-at-risk populations. - Women’s vulnerability to climate risk is highly contextual; this methodology to identify hotspots can be applied to identify subnational hotspots within countries. - When root causes of women’s excess risk to climate change impacts are addressed, women can be agents of change in building climate resilience."
format Brief
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
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publisherStr CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform
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spelling CGSpace1200172025-12-08T10:29:22Z Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience Puskur, Ranjitha Lecoutere, Els climate change food systems nutrition agriculture women "Key Messages - Women in food systems tend to be more negatively impacted by climate risks than men as they are more dependent on agriculture as well as more constrained in responding and adapting to changes in climate because of structural socio-economic inequalities.  - Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots, where climate hazards converge with large concentrations of women participating in food systems and significant structural gender inequalities, enables allocating scarce resources to most-at-risk populations. - Women’s vulnerability to climate risk is highly contextual; this methodology to identify hotspots can be applied to identify subnational hotspots within countries. - When root causes of women’s excess risk to climate change impacts are addressed, women can be agents of change in building climate resilience." 2022-06-02 2022-07-05T14:59:13Z 2022-07-05T14:59:13Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120017 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform Puskur, R. and Lecoutere, E. 2022. Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience. CGIAR GENDER Platform Evidence Explainer. Nairobi, Kenya: CGIAR GENDER Platform.
spellingShingle climate change
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
women
Puskur, Ranjitha
Lecoutere, Els
Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title_full Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title_fullStr Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title_full_unstemmed Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title_short Identifying climate–agriculture–gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
title_sort identifying climate agriculture gender inequality hotspots can help target investments and make women drivers of climate resilience
topic climate change
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
women
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120017
work_keys_str_mv AT puskurranjitha identifyingclimateagriculturegenderinequalityhotspotscanhelptargetinvestmentsandmakewomendriversofclimateresilience
AT lecoutereels identifyingclimateagriculturegenderinequalityhotspotscanhelptargetinvestmentsandmakewomendriversofclimateresilience