Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors

This baseline gender study evaluates the starting conditions for the Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project in Uganda, implemented in Soroti, Kaberamaido, Isingiro, and Mayuge. The assessment focuses on gendered participation, access to productive r...

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Autores principales: Babirye, Immaculate, Ouya, Frederick, Mugagga, Isaac, Paparu, Pamela, Lutomia, Cosmas, Ketema, Dessalegn, Nchanji, Eileen
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179584
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author Babirye, Immaculate
Ouya, Frederick
Mugagga, Isaac
Paparu, Pamela
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_browse Babirye, Immaculate
Ketema, Dessalegn
Lutomia, Cosmas
Mugagga, Isaac
Nchanji, Eileen
Ouya, Frederick
Paparu, Pamela
author_facet Babirye, Immaculate
Ouya, Frederick
Mugagga, Isaac
Paparu, Pamela
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_sort Babirye, Immaculate
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This baseline gender study evaluates the starting conditions for the Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project in Uganda, implemented in Soroti, Kaberamaido, Isingiro, and Mayuge. The assessment focuses on gendered participation, access to productive resources, labour distribution, decision making, and inclusion across the project’s three priority enterprises, such as beans, fruit trees, and beneficial insects. The findings provide crucial data for developing gender-responsive, socially inclusive interventions that promote climate resilience, food security, and value-chain performance for smallholder farmers. The results reveal persistent gender disparities across various domains. Although 82% of households are male headed, women constitute 59% of the key players involved in agricultural production, highlighting their central role in beans, fruit trees, and emerging insect enterprises. Women are the primary labour providers on bean plots (71% overall), influence crucial production decisions, and achieve higher yields than men while having much lower landholdings. However, structural barriers, including limited land rights, reduced digital access, restricted mobility, and weaker market linkages, continue to hamper women’s full capacity to benefit from agricultural innovations. Group membership is higher among women (76%); however, men disproportionately occupy leadership posts, demonstrating underlying gender power imbalances in collective activity and resource access. Across firms, the analysis indicates gendered patterns of participation and control. Women are more engaged in bean cultivation and avocado ownership, whereas men dominate citrus production, decision-making over fruit income, and beekeeping. Awareness and use of agro-weather information services are very high, but access challenges, particularly digital constraints, limited extension, and low gender-responsive communication, affect women disproportionately. Emerging prospects exist in insect farming and value addition; yet knowledge and adoption remain low for both genders. Overall, the baseline creates clear entry points for the BRAINS project to increase equity, strengthen climate resilience, and encourage gender-transformative outcomes. Targeted action is needed to promote women’s land access, increase their involvement in lucrative markets, enhance access to digital and climate information, and support equitable household decision-making within climate-smart agricultural systems.
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spelling CGSpace1795842026-01-10T02:16:27Z Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors Babirye, Immaculate Ouya, Frederick Mugagga, Isaac Paparu, Pamela Lutomia, Cosmas Ketema, Dessalegn Nchanji, Eileen empowerment food systems resilience gender analysis This baseline gender study evaluates the starting conditions for the Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project in Uganda, implemented in Soroti, Kaberamaido, Isingiro, and Mayuge. The assessment focuses on gendered participation, access to productive resources, labour distribution, decision making, and inclusion across the project’s three priority enterprises, such as beans, fruit trees, and beneficial insects. The findings provide crucial data for developing gender-responsive, socially inclusive interventions that promote climate resilience, food security, and value-chain performance for smallholder farmers. The results reveal persistent gender disparities across various domains. Although 82% of households are male headed, women constitute 59% of the key players involved in agricultural production, highlighting their central role in beans, fruit trees, and emerging insect enterprises. Women are the primary labour providers on bean plots (71% overall), influence crucial production decisions, and achieve higher yields than men while having much lower landholdings. However, structural barriers, including limited land rights, reduced digital access, restricted mobility, and weaker market linkages, continue to hamper women’s full capacity to benefit from agricultural innovations. Group membership is higher among women (76%); however, men disproportionately occupy leadership posts, demonstrating underlying gender power imbalances in collective activity and resource access. Across firms, the analysis indicates gendered patterns of participation and control. Women are more engaged in bean cultivation and avocado ownership, whereas men dominate citrus production, decision-making over fruit income, and beekeeping. Awareness and use of agro-weather information services are very high, but access challenges, particularly digital constraints, limited extension, and low gender-responsive communication, affect women disproportionately. Emerging prospects exist in insect farming and value addition; yet knowledge and adoption remain low for both genders. Overall, the baseline creates clear entry points for the BRAINS project to increase equity, strengthen climate resilience, and encourage gender-transformative outcomes. Targeted action is needed to promote women’s land access, increase their involvement in lucrative markets, enhance access to digital and climate information, and support equitable household decision-making within climate-smart agricultural systems. 2025-12-21 2026-01-09T08:45:33Z 2026-01-09T08:45:33Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179584 en Open Access application/pdf Babirye, I.; Ouya, F.; Mugagga, I.; Paparu, P.; Lutomia, C.; Ketema, D.; Nchanji, E. (2025) Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors. 30 p.
spellingShingle empowerment
food systems
resilience
gender analysis
Babirye, Immaculate
Ouya, Frederick
Mugagga, Isaac
Paparu, Pamela
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_full Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_fullStr Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_short Quantitative gender analysis country report, Uganda: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_sort quantitative gender analysis country report uganda building equitable climate resilient african bean and insect sectors
topic empowerment
food systems
resilience
gender analysis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179584
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