TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda

Research has documented how men's behaviors in patriarchal settings affect women's economic empowerment outcomes, while less attention has been paid to how gender identity constructions around femininities influence these outcomes. We define femininities as gender based roles and expected behaviors...

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Autores principales: Shimali, Fred, Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo, Mwiine, A.A., Businge, M., Nakyewa, B., Nanyonjo, G., Angudubo, S., Sanya, L.N., Asiimwe, E.
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Makerere University 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125638
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author Shimali, Fred
Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo
Mwiine, A.A.
Businge, M.
Nakyewa, B.
Nanyonjo, G.
Angudubo, S.
Sanya, L.N.
Asiimwe, E.
author_browse Angudubo, S.
Asiimwe, E.
Businge, M.
Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo
Mwiine, A.A.
Nakyewa, B.
Nanyonjo, G.
Sanya, L.N.
Shimali, Fred
author_facet Shimali, Fred
Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo
Mwiine, A.A.
Businge, M.
Nakyewa, B.
Nanyonjo, G.
Angudubo, S.
Sanya, L.N.
Asiimwe, E.
author_sort Shimali, Fred
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Research has documented how men's behaviors in patriarchal settings affect women's economic empowerment outcomes, while less attention has been paid to how gender identity constructions around femininities influence these outcomes. We define femininities as gender based roles and expected behaviors of women in a given community and economic empowerment as women's decision-making regarding access and control of productive resources and management of income. This paper presents research on how female and male farmers in rural communities of central Uganda define what it means to be a woman and how those identity constructions influence women's economic empowerment. This qualitative case study is based on focus group discussions conducted with Sasakawa Africa Association intervention farmers (28 women and 25 men) of Kiboga District. Six focus group discussions were conducted, two with men only, women only, and both men and women respectively. Findings reveal co-existence of traditional and progressive femininities, dubbed "unruly" by men and some women. Traditional femininities were depicted as women complying to community values which deter them from financial decision making and owning productive resources. Progressive femininities on the other hand are noncompliant to these community values, and enjoy more economic empowerment. Men valued economically empowered women because they relieve men of financial responsibilities. Incorporating gender transformative approaches in women's economic empowerment interventions could decode traditional femininities and increase women's intrinsic agency within the context of economic empowerment.
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spelling CGSpace1256382024-03-06T10:16:43Z TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda Shimali, Fred Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo Mwiine, A.A. Businge, M. Nakyewa, B. Nanyonjo, G. Angudubo, S. Sanya, L.N. Asiimwe, E. gender agriculture Research has documented how men's behaviors in patriarchal settings affect women's economic empowerment outcomes, while less attention has been paid to how gender identity constructions around femininities influence these outcomes. We define femininities as gender based roles and expected behaviors of women in a given community and economic empowerment as women's decision-making regarding access and control of productive resources and management of income. This paper presents research on how female and male farmers in rural communities of central Uganda define what it means to be a woman and how those identity constructions influence women's economic empowerment. This qualitative case study is based on focus group discussions conducted with Sasakawa Africa Association intervention farmers (28 women and 25 men) of Kiboga District. Six focus group discussions were conducted, two with men only, women only, and both men and women respectively. Findings reveal co-existence of traditional and progressive femininities, dubbed "unruly" by men and some women. Traditional femininities were depicted as women complying to community values which deter them from financial decision making and owning productive resources. Progressive femininities on the other hand are noncompliant to these community values, and enjoy more economic empowerment. Men valued economically empowered women because they relieve men of financial responsibilities. Incorporating gender transformative approaches in women's economic empowerment interventions could decode traditional femininities and increase women's intrinsic agency within the context of economic empowerment. 2022-10 2022-11-23T06:52:13Z 2022-11-23T06:52:13Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125638 en Open Access application/pdf Makerere University Shimali, Fred; Mangheni, Margaret N.; Mwiine, A.A.; Businge, M.; Nakyewa, B.; Nanyonjo, G.; Angudubo, S.; Sanya, L.N.; Asiimwe, E. 2022. Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda. Presented a the CGIAR GENDER Science Exchange, Nairobi, 12-14 October 2022. Kampala: Makerere University
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
Shimali, Fred
Mangheni, Margaret Najjingo
Mwiine, A.A.
Businge, M.
Nakyewa, B.
Nanyonjo, G.
Angudubo, S.
Sanya, L.N.
Asiimwe, E.
TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title_full TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title_fullStr TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title_full_unstemmed TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title_short TH2.1: Understanding femininities: Implications for women's Participation in Agricultural interventions in central Uganda
title_sort th2 1 understanding femininities implications for women s participation in agricultural interventions in central uganda
topic gender
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125638
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