To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers

Healthy soils play a critical role in supporting agricultural productivity, climate change mitigation and resilience, and a range of ecosystem services. Up to 65% of Africa’s productive land is estimated to be degraded, and far too many smallholder farmers must eke out a living on degraded and nutri...

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Autores principales: Ringler, Claudia, Masso, Cargele
Formato: Blog Post
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170119
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author Ringler, Claudia
Masso, Cargele
author_browse Masso, Cargele
Ringler, Claudia
author_facet Ringler, Claudia
Masso, Cargele
author_sort Ringler, Claudia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Healthy soils play a critical role in supporting agricultural productivity, climate change mitigation and resilience, and a range of ecosystem services. Up to 65% of Africa’s productive land is estimated to be degraded, and far too many smallholder farmers must eke out a living on degraded and nutrient depleted soils. While many technical options for soil improvement or restoration exist, a large number of them remain “on the shelf” or do not see widespread use due to sociocultural, institutional, economic, and policy barriers that stand in the way of their uptake at scale. Gender inequality is deeply embedded in soil health and plant nutrient management; It reinforces these barriers and represents a “wicked problem” requiring a fuller understanding of context and culture-specific approaches. Persistent inequalities such as women’s lower access to both agricultural resources and knowledge are a significant contributor to the 24% gap in land productivity between women and men farmers on farms of equal size, as well as to major differences in labor productivity.
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spelling CGSpace1701192025-01-27T17:59:29Z To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers Ringler, Claudia Masso, Cargele soil agricultural productivity climate change mitigation ecosystem services smallholders gender equality Healthy soils play a critical role in supporting agricultural productivity, climate change mitigation and resilience, and a range of ecosystem services. Up to 65% of Africa’s productive land is estimated to be degraded, and far too many smallholder farmers must eke out a living on degraded and nutrient depleted soils. While many technical options for soil improvement or restoration exist, a large number of them remain “on the shelf” or do not see widespread use due to sociocultural, institutional, economic, and policy barriers that stand in the way of their uptake at scale. Gender inequality is deeply embedded in soil health and plant nutrient management; It reinforces these barriers and represents a “wicked problem” requiring a fuller understanding of context and culture-specific approaches. Persistent inequalities such as women’s lower access to both agricultural resources and knowledge are a significant contributor to the 24% gap in land productivity between women and men farmers on farms of equal size, as well as to major differences in labor productivity. 2024-05-06 2025-01-27T17:59:28Z 2025-01-27T17:59:28Z Blog Post https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170119 en Open Access International Food Policy Research Institute Ringler, Claudia; and Masso, Cargele. 2024. To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers. IFPRI Blog. https://www.ifpri.org/blog/improve-africas-soil-health-and-plant-nutrition-empower-women-farmers/
spellingShingle soil
agricultural productivity
climate change mitigation
ecosystem services
smallholders
gender equality
Ringler, Claudia
Masso, Cargele
To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title_full To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title_fullStr To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title_full_unstemmed To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title_short To improve Africa’s soil health and plant nutrition, empower women farmers
title_sort to improve africa s soil health and plant nutrition empower women farmers
topic soil
agricultural productivity
climate change mitigation
ecosystem services
smallholders
gender equality
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170119
work_keys_str_mv AT ringlerclaudia toimproveafricassoilhealthandplantnutritionempowerwomenfarmers
AT massocargele toimproveafricassoilhealthandplantnutritionempowerwomenfarmers