Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment

Societal Impact Statement: Gender responsive and more socially inclusive breeding strategies are needed to ensure new crop varieties, which offer greater yields in an increasingly variable climate, meet the needs of a diverse range of smallholder farmers. Participatory varietal selection actively in...

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Autores principales: Cairns, Jill E., Zaman-Allah, Mainassara, Baudron, Frédéric, Voss, Rachel C., Hassall, Kirsty L., Euler, Michael A., Amondo, Emily I., Marenya, Paswel P., Prasanna, Boddupalli M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175808
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author Cairns, Jill E.
Zaman-Allah, Mainassara
Baudron, Frédéric
Voss, Rachel C.
Hassall, Kirsty L.
Euler, Michael A.
Amondo, Emily I.
Marenya, Paswel P.
Prasanna, Boddupalli M.
author_browse Amondo, Emily I.
Baudron, Frédéric
Cairns, Jill E.
Euler, Michael A.
Hassall, Kirsty L.
Marenya, Paswel P.
Prasanna, Boddupalli M.
Voss, Rachel C.
Zaman-Allah, Mainassara
author_facet Cairns, Jill E.
Zaman-Allah, Mainassara
Baudron, Frédéric
Voss, Rachel C.
Hassall, Kirsty L.
Euler, Michael A.
Amondo, Emily I.
Marenya, Paswel P.
Prasanna, Boddupalli M.
author_sort Cairns, Jill E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Societal Impact Statement: Gender responsive and more socially inclusive breeding strategies are needed to ensure new crop varieties, which offer greater yields in an increasingly variable climate, meet the needs of a diverse range of smallholder farmers. Participatory varietal selection actively involves farmers in testing and selecting new varieties at the end of the breeding process. We evaluated the inclusivity of a participatory maize breeding program in Zimbabwe. Our analysis found that setting targets for women farmer participation ensured adequate representation, but participatory research should move beyond simple targets and ensure the inclusion of different types of women and men farmers. Summary: There is growing interest in participatory varietal selection and gender-responsive breeding in research and development initiatives. On-farm testing is increasingly used to ensure that new varieties perform within the target environments. However, there are few established approaches for selecting host women and men farmers who reflect the diversity of the overall target population of smallholder farmers. This study sought to evaluate ex-post if recruited farmers within a participatory breeding network in Zimbabwe were representative of the surveyed population and pilot an approach to developing comprehensive farm typologies to ensure more gender-responsive and socially inclusive breeding. A sample of over 2,000 randomly selected women and men farmers, including those hosting breeding trials, were surveyed. A typology was constructed to group farms with similar characteristics associated with household demographics, maize production and resource endowments. This facilitated the subsample of trial-hosting farmers characteristics to be compared with the broader typology.The distribution of farm types selected by extension agents to host trials closely reflected the distribution of farm types within the surveyed population. Two farm types associated with women household heads and three types associated with men-headed households were identified, highlighting the heterogeneity within these groups. Other important factors of differentiation included farm assets, livestock ownership and maize production features. Sampling strategies that explicitly incorporate agronomic and socio-economic diversity within the target population should be used in the selection of host women and men farmers for participatory research to ensure appropriate gender and social inclusion.
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spelling CGSpace1758082025-12-08T10:11:39Z Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment Cairns, Jill E. Zaman-Allah, Mainassara Baudron, Frédéric Voss, Rachel C. Hassall, Kirsty L. Euler, Michael A. Amondo, Emily I. Marenya, Paswel P. Prasanna, Boddupalli M. farm typology gender intersectionality participatory research participatory varietal selection smallholders social inclusion women's participation households Societal Impact Statement: Gender responsive and more socially inclusive breeding strategies are needed to ensure new crop varieties, which offer greater yields in an increasingly variable climate, meet the needs of a diverse range of smallholder farmers. Participatory varietal selection actively involves farmers in testing and selecting new varieties at the end of the breeding process. We evaluated the inclusivity of a participatory maize breeding program in Zimbabwe. Our analysis found that setting targets for women farmer participation ensured adequate representation, but participatory research should move beyond simple targets and ensure the inclusion of different types of women and men farmers. Summary: There is growing interest in participatory varietal selection and gender-responsive breeding in research and development initiatives. On-farm testing is increasingly used to ensure that new varieties perform within the target environments. However, there are few established approaches for selecting host women and men farmers who reflect the diversity of the overall target population of smallholder farmers. This study sought to evaluate ex-post if recruited farmers within a participatory breeding network in Zimbabwe were representative of the surveyed population and pilot an approach to developing comprehensive farm typologies to ensure more gender-responsive and socially inclusive breeding. A sample of over 2,000 randomly selected women and men farmers, including those hosting breeding trials, were surveyed. A typology was constructed to group farms with similar characteristics associated with household demographics, maize production and resource endowments. This facilitated the subsample of trial-hosting farmers characteristics to be compared with the broader typology.The distribution of farm types selected by extension agents to host trials closely reflected the distribution of farm types within the surveyed population. Two farm types associated with women household heads and three types associated with men-headed households were identified, highlighting the heterogeneity within these groups. Other important factors of differentiation included farm assets, livestock ownership and maize production features. Sampling strategies that explicitly incorporate agronomic and socio-economic diversity within the target population should be used in the selection of host women and men farmers for participatory research to ensure appropriate gender and social inclusion. 2025 2025-07-25T17:00:32Z 2025-07-25T17:00:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175808 en Open Access application/pdf Wiley Cairns, J. E., Zaman‐Allah, M., Baudron, F., Voss, R. C., Hassall, K. L., Euler, M., Amondo, E., Marenya, P. P., & Prasanna, B. M. (2025). Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment. Plants People Planet. https://doi.org/10.1002/ppp3.70070
spellingShingle farm typology
gender
intersectionality
participatory research
participatory varietal selection
smallholders
social inclusion
women's participation
households
Cairns, Jill E.
Zaman-Allah, Mainassara
Baudron, Frédéric
Voss, Rachel C.
Hassall, Kirsty L.
Euler, Michael A.
Amondo, Emily I.
Marenya, Paswel P.
Prasanna, Boddupalli M.
Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title_full Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title_fullStr Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title_full_unstemmed Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title_short Know your men and women farmers: Ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
title_sort know your men and women farmers ensuring host farmers in participatory trials represent heterogeneity within the target environment
topic farm typology
gender
intersectionality
participatory research
participatory varietal selection
smallholders
social inclusion
women's participation
households
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175808
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