Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda

This work analyses the gender differentiated preferences in improved forage seeds implemented in the Grass2Cash project, carried out in Kenya and Uganda by The Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT. This project was a scaling initiative aimed at enhancing livestock productivity in East Afric...

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Autores principales: Pazos Cardenas, Mateo, Junca Paredes, John Jairo, Sandoval, Danny, Waluse, Kenneth, Triana Ángel, Natalia, Burkart, Stefan, Jauregui, Rosa
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176943
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author Pazos Cardenas, Mateo
Junca Paredes, John Jairo
Sandoval, Danny
Waluse, Kenneth
Triana Ángel, Natalia
Burkart, Stefan
Jauregui, Rosa
author_browse Burkart, Stefan
Jauregui, Rosa
Junca Paredes, John Jairo
Pazos Cardenas, Mateo
Sandoval, Danny
Triana Ángel, Natalia
Waluse, Kenneth
author_facet Pazos Cardenas, Mateo
Junca Paredes, John Jairo
Sandoval, Danny
Waluse, Kenneth
Triana Ángel, Natalia
Burkart, Stefan
Jauregui, Rosa
author_sort Pazos Cardenas, Mateo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This work analyses the gender differentiated preferences in improved forage seeds implemented in the Grass2Cash project, carried out in Kenya and Uganda by The Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT. This project was a scaling initiative aimed at enhancing livestock productivity in East Africa by promoting the adoption of improved forages among smallholder farmers from 2021 to 2024, supporting forage businesses groups by providing high quality planting materials. The project collected data for more than 1.5000 smallholder farmers between both countries, disaggregated by different categories, such as gender, age, and caractheristics of householders, plots, forages planted, and incomes. The research’s originality lies in the effort to address the knowledge gap of gender analysis and women’s needs and preferences in the breeding developments, especially within the forages research field. Although some advances have been made in incorporating gender discussion in breeding for other types of crops, the forages are a step behind in this kind of efforts. The study finds that there is a similar proportion between men and women farmers in the Demo Plots, where majority of them are between 36 and 60 years and with a relatively high educational level (mostly with secondary completed, but also with college education). There are similarities between both men and women in terms of preferred type of forage planted, significant traits and majority of incomes related to milk sales (although much higher for men). In terms of benefits, there are also common aspects such as higher incomes and improvement of yield productivity; however, for women are also important time saving, family nutrition aspects and incomes for schooling (which don’t appear in men’s responses). These findings correlate with studies in other types of crops that demonstrate the benefits for including women in breeding processes but also are relevant and innovative data for the forages and breeding research field, that can open roads for deeper comparative analysis. Another important finding is that youth populations have significant differences in their uses of forages plots and incomes, which is field research that precises further development and attention.
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spelling CGSpace1769432025-12-02T10:59:51Z Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda Pazos Cardenas, Mateo Junca Paredes, John Jairo Sandoval, Danny Waluse, Kenneth Triana Ángel, Natalia Burkart, Stefan Jauregui, Rosa gender analysis análisis de género surveys hybrids leguminosa forrajera feed grasses encuesta gramínea forrajera feed legumes finca experimental híbrido experimental farms This work analyses the gender differentiated preferences in improved forage seeds implemented in the Grass2Cash project, carried out in Kenya and Uganda by The Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT. This project was a scaling initiative aimed at enhancing livestock productivity in East Africa by promoting the adoption of improved forages among smallholder farmers from 2021 to 2024, supporting forage businesses groups by providing high quality planting materials. The project collected data for more than 1.5000 smallholder farmers between both countries, disaggregated by different categories, such as gender, age, and caractheristics of householders, plots, forages planted, and incomes. The research’s originality lies in the effort to address the knowledge gap of gender analysis and women’s needs and preferences in the breeding developments, especially within the forages research field. Although some advances have been made in incorporating gender discussion in breeding for other types of crops, the forages are a step behind in this kind of efforts. The study finds that there is a similar proportion between men and women farmers in the Demo Plots, where majority of them are between 36 and 60 years and with a relatively high educational level (mostly with secondary completed, but also with college education). There are similarities between both men and women in terms of preferred type of forage planted, significant traits and majority of incomes related to milk sales (although much higher for men). In terms of benefits, there are also common aspects such as higher incomes and improvement of yield productivity; however, for women are also important time saving, family nutrition aspects and incomes for schooling (which don’t appear in men’s responses). These findings correlate with studies in other types of crops that demonstrate the benefits for including women in breeding processes but also are relevant and innovative data for the forages and breeding research field, that can open roads for deeper comparative analysis. Another important finding is that youth populations have significant differences in their uses of forages plots and incomes, which is field research that precises further development and attention. 2025-09-11 2025-10-09T14:30:27Z 2025-10-09T14:30:27Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176943 en Open Access application/pdf Pazos Cardenas, M.; Junca Paredes, J.J.; Sandoval, D.; Waluse, K.; Triana Ángel, N.; Burkart, S.; Jauregui, R. (2025) Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda. Presented at Tropentag 2025: Reconcile Land System Changes with Planetary Health. Bonn, Germany, 10-12 September 2025. 5 sl.
spellingShingle gender analysis
análisis de género
surveys
hybrids
leguminosa forrajera
feed grasses
encuesta
gramínea forrajera
feed legumes
finca experimental
híbrido
experimental farms
Pazos Cardenas, Mateo
Junca Paredes, John Jairo
Sandoval, Danny
Waluse, Kenneth
Triana Ángel, Natalia
Burkart, Stefan
Jauregui, Rosa
Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title_full Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title_fullStr Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title_short Gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in Kenya and Uganda
title_sort gender differences and preferences in improved forage seeds demo farms experience amongst livestock farmers in kenya and uganda
topic gender analysis
análisis de género
surveys
hybrids
leguminosa forrajera
feed grasses
encuesta
gramínea forrajera
feed legumes
finca experimental
híbrido
experimental farms
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176943
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