Applying an intersectional lens to scaling

As climate change disproportionately affects smallholder farmers, especially women and marginalized groups, integrating intersectionality into agricultural research for development (AR4D) is essential for inclusive and equitable scaling. Intersectional analysis reveals how overlapping identities (e....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ewell, Hanna, Huyer, Sophia, Gondwe, Therese
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174858
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author Ewell, Hanna
Huyer, Sophia
Gondwe, Therese
author_browse Ewell, Hanna
Gondwe, Therese
Huyer, Sophia
author_facet Ewell, Hanna
Huyer, Sophia
Gondwe, Therese
author_sort Ewell, Hanna
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description As climate change disproportionately affects smallholder farmers, especially women and marginalized groups, integrating intersectionality into agricultural research for development (AR4D) is essential for inclusive and equitable scaling. Intersectional analysis reveals how overlapping identities (e.g., gender, age, ethnicity, disability, socioeconomic status) create compounded disadvantages often overlooked in innovation processes. The AICCRA project demonstrates how tailoring climate-smart agriculture (CSA) and climate information services (CIS) to diverse social realities, through participatory design, targeted training, and local governance—can advance empowerment and social equity.
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spelling CGSpace1748582025-12-08T10:11:39Z Applying an intersectional lens to scaling Ewell, Hanna Huyer, Sophia Gondwe, Therese evaluation agriculture resilience innovation gender equity inclusion socioeconomic development As climate change disproportionately affects smallholder farmers, especially women and marginalized groups, integrating intersectionality into agricultural research for development (AR4D) is essential for inclusive and equitable scaling. Intersectional analysis reveals how overlapping identities (e.g., gender, age, ethnicity, disability, socioeconomic status) create compounded disadvantages often overlooked in innovation processes. The AICCRA project demonstrates how tailoring climate-smart agriculture (CSA) and climate information services (CIS) to diverse social realities, through participatory design, targeted training, and local governance—can advance empowerment and social equity. 2025-05-28 2025-05-29T04:41:55Z 2025-05-29T04:41:55Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174858 en Open Access application/pdf Ewell, H.; Huyer, S.; Gondwe, T. (2025) Applying an intersectional lens to scaling. AICCRA InfoNote. 4 p.
spellingShingle evaluation
agriculture
resilience
innovation
gender equity
inclusion
socioeconomic development
Ewell, Hanna
Huyer, Sophia
Gondwe, Therese
Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title_full Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title_fullStr Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title_full_unstemmed Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title_short Applying an intersectional lens to scaling
title_sort applying an intersectional lens to scaling
topic evaluation
agriculture
resilience
innovation
gender equity
inclusion
socioeconomic development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174858
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AT gondwetherese applyinganintersectionallenstoscaling