TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana

This paper provides empirical evidence on the processes and strategies of encouraging women's entrepreneurship and the impact of women's entrepreneurship on their empowerment in the context of emerging aquaculture value chains in Sub-Saharan Africa. We do this by analyzing two survey rounds with 500...

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Main Authors: Ragasa, Catherine, Torbi, Eva, Kruijssen, Froukje, Amewu, Sena
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125633
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author Ragasa, Catherine
Torbi, Eva
Kruijssen, Froukje
Amewu, Sena
author_browse Amewu, Sena
Kruijssen, Froukje
Ragasa, Catherine
Torbi, Eva
author_facet Ragasa, Catherine
Torbi, Eva
Kruijssen, Froukje
Amewu, Sena
author_sort Ragasa, Catherine
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper provides empirical evidence on the processes and strategies of encouraging women's entrepreneurship and the impact of women's entrepreneurship on their empowerment in the context of emerging aquaculture value chains in Sub-Saharan Africa. We do this by analyzing two survey rounds with 500 fish-producing household, A-WEAI, 11 in-depth interviews, and 7 FGDs of women in six major producing regions in Ghana. Baseline data show that 9% of fish farm managers/owners were women; and women contributed 16% of labor days. Gender norms persist around aquaculture as men's job; only few women entered aquaculture. Once women entered aquaculture, they were at least as productive and profitable as men on average. Women aqua-entrepreneurs were at least as empowered as the men aqua-entrepreneurs. Being able to break the popular perspective and gender norm that "aquaculture is a men's job" and still started and operated aquafarms, these women were empowered to begin with. Their engagement in aquaculture had benefited them and empowered them more. The majority of the spouses of men aqua-entrepreneurs were not involved in aquaculture, and had lower empowerment score and were less likely to be empowered than the women and men aqua-entrepreneurs. Most of them indicated that they would like to get involved in aquaculture as it will generate more income. We discuss in this paper opportunities and strategies to involve more women in fish-producing households and to encourage new female farmers to enter aquaculture and other aspects of the value chains.
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institution CGIAR Consortium
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publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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spelling CGSpace1256332025-11-06T07:17:48Z TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana Ragasa, Catherine Torbi, Eva Kruijssen, Froukje Amewu, Sena gender agriculture This paper provides empirical evidence on the processes and strategies of encouraging women's entrepreneurship and the impact of women's entrepreneurship on their empowerment in the context of emerging aquaculture value chains in Sub-Saharan Africa. We do this by analyzing two survey rounds with 500 fish-producing household, A-WEAI, 11 in-depth interviews, and 7 FGDs of women in six major producing regions in Ghana. Baseline data show that 9% of fish farm managers/owners were women; and women contributed 16% of labor days. Gender norms persist around aquaculture as men's job; only few women entered aquaculture. Once women entered aquaculture, they were at least as productive and profitable as men on average. Women aqua-entrepreneurs were at least as empowered as the men aqua-entrepreneurs. Being able to break the popular perspective and gender norm that "aquaculture is a men's job" and still started and operated aquafarms, these women were empowered to begin with. Their engagement in aquaculture had benefited them and empowered them more. The majority of the spouses of men aqua-entrepreneurs were not involved in aquaculture, and had lower empowerment score and were less likely to be empowered than the women and men aqua-entrepreneurs. Most of them indicated that they would like to get involved in aquaculture as it will generate more income. We discuss in this paper opportunities and strategies to involve more women in fish-producing households and to encourage new female farmers to enter aquaculture and other aspects of the value chains. 2022-10 2022-11-23T06:52:11Z 2022-11-23T06:52:11Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125633 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Ragasa, Catherine; Torbi, Eva; Kruijssen, Froukje; Amewu, Sena. 2022. Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana. Presented a the CGIAR GENDER Science Exchange, Nairobi, 12-14 October 2022. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125633
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
Ragasa, Catherine
Torbi, Eva
Kruijssen, Froukje
Amewu, Sena
TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title_full TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title_fullStr TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title_full_unstemmed TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title_short TH1.2: Boosting women's participation and empowerment in aquaculture: Evidence from Ghana
title_sort th1 2 boosting women s participation and empowerment in aquaculture evidence from ghana
topic gender
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125633
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