Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia

Aquaculture, the farming of aquatic organisms like fish, is crucial for food security, income and employment in sub-Saharan Africa. However, gender inequalities hinder women’s agency and climate-adaptive capacities in this sector. Women often face limited access to productive assets and climate-smar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mudege, N.N., Lecoutere, E., Arhin-Sam, K., Kihoro, E., Kakwasha, K., Manyise, T.
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174918
_version_ 1855527480316657664
author Mudege, N.N.
Lecoutere, E.
Arhin-Sam, K.
Kihoro, E.
Kakwasha, K.
Manyise, T.
author_browse Arhin-Sam, K.
Kakwasha, K.
Kihoro, E.
Lecoutere, E.
Manyise, T.
Mudege, N.N.
author_facet Mudege, N.N.
Lecoutere, E.
Arhin-Sam, K.
Kihoro, E.
Kakwasha, K.
Manyise, T.
author_sort Mudege, N.N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Aquaculture, the farming of aquatic organisms like fish, is crucial for food security, income and employment in sub-Saharan Africa. However, gender inequalities hinder women’s agency and climate-adaptive capacities in this sector. Women often face limited access to productive assets and climate-smart technologies and experience restrictive social norms. These constraints result in gendered divisions of labor, inequitable benefit distribution and disparities in resource access and power within the aquaculture value chain. Climate change affects water quality, fish health and overall production, thereby posing economic challenges to communities that rely on aquaculture and exacerbating gender inequalities. This study explores whether addressing gender constraints in aquaculture can enhance women’s empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities. The study uses a mixed-methods quasi-experimental design and draws on primary data collected in October 2022 in Northern and Luapula provinces, climate change hotspots where gender equality and climate-adaptive capacities are acutely challenged. It examines the extent to which gender-intentional and gender-responsive aquaculture interventions by WorldFish in Zambia that address some of these constraints—such as women’s limited agency and limited access to technology, information and knowledge—are associated with women’s empowerment, better food and nutrition outcomes and enhanced climate-adaptive capacities. The research additionally compares project-level Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (pro-WEAI) measures between treatment and control groups. Findings reveal a positive relationship between these interventions and women’s access to aquaculture information, involvement in decision-making, adoption of climate-smart practices, and improved food security. However, a weak negative relationship is noted regarding women’s control over fishpond income. Qualitative insights emphasize the importance of women role models and of cooperatives to improve access to land as well as the challenges of gendered roles in control of resources and in decision-making.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace174918
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform
publisherStr CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1749182025-08-15T09:36:28Z Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia Mudege, N.N. Lecoutere, E. Arhin-Sam, K. Kihoro, E. Kakwasha, K. Manyise, T. aquaculture women empowerment climate impact assessment Aquaculture, the farming of aquatic organisms like fish, is crucial for food security, income and employment in sub-Saharan Africa. However, gender inequalities hinder women’s agency and climate-adaptive capacities in this sector. Women often face limited access to productive assets and climate-smart technologies and experience restrictive social norms. These constraints result in gendered divisions of labor, inequitable benefit distribution and disparities in resource access and power within the aquaculture value chain. Climate change affects water quality, fish health and overall production, thereby posing economic challenges to communities that rely on aquaculture and exacerbating gender inequalities. This study explores whether addressing gender constraints in aquaculture can enhance women’s empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities. The study uses a mixed-methods quasi-experimental design and draws on primary data collected in October 2022 in Northern and Luapula provinces, climate change hotspots where gender equality and climate-adaptive capacities are acutely challenged. It examines the extent to which gender-intentional and gender-responsive aquaculture interventions by WorldFish in Zambia that address some of these constraints—such as women’s limited agency and limited access to technology, information and knowledge—are associated with women’s empowerment, better food and nutrition outcomes and enhanced climate-adaptive capacities. The research additionally compares project-level Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (pro-WEAI) measures between treatment and control groups. Findings reveal a positive relationship between these interventions and women’s access to aquaculture information, involvement in decision-making, adoption of climate-smart practices, and improved food security. However, a weak negative relationship is noted regarding women’s control over fishpond income. Qualitative insights emphasize the importance of women role models and of cooperatives to improve access to land as well as the challenges of gendered roles in control of resources and in decision-making. 2025-05-30 2025-06-03T09:17:09Z 2025-06-03T09:17:09Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174918 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform Mudege, N. N., Lecoutere, E., Arhin-Sam, K., Kihoro, E., Kakwasha, K. and Manyise, T. 2025. Enhancing women’s empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia. CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform Working Paper #028. Nairobi, Kenya: CGIAR GENDER Impact Platform.
spellingShingle aquaculture
women
empowerment
climate
impact assessment
Mudege, N.N.
Lecoutere, E.
Arhin-Sam, K.
Kihoro, E.
Kakwasha, K.
Manyise, T.
Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title_full Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title_fullStr Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title_short Enhancing women's empowerment and climate-adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in Zambia
title_sort enhancing women s empowerment and climate adaptive capacities in aquaculture in climate hotspots in zambia
topic aquaculture
women
empowerment
climate
impact assessment
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174918
work_keys_str_mv AT mudegenn enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia
AT lecouteree enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia
AT arhinsamk enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia
AT kihoroe enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia
AT kakwashak enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia
AT manyiset enhancingwomensempowermentandclimateadaptivecapacitiesinaquacultureinclimatehotspotsinzambia