Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors

The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is a multi-country initiative that aims to create low-carbon, climate-resilient, and inclusive agricultural systems across 15 nations in sub-Saharan Africa. In Malawi, BRAINS focuses on strengthening the be...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kabuli, Hilda, Ouya, Frederick, Chisale, Virginia, Kachigamba, Donald, Chakhumbira, Feston, Botha, Sara, Lutomia, Cosmas, Ketema, Dessalegn, Nchanji, Eileen
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180169
_version_ 1855543013271404544
author Kabuli, Hilda
Ouya, Frederick
Chisale, Virginia
Kachigamba, Donald
Chakhumbira, Feston
Botha, Sara
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_browse Botha, Sara
Chakhumbira, Feston
Chisale, Virginia
Kabuli, Hilda
Kachigamba, Donald
Ketema, Dessalegn
Lutomia, Cosmas
Nchanji, Eileen
Ouya, Frederick
author_facet Kabuli, Hilda
Ouya, Frederick
Chisale, Virginia
Kachigamba, Donald
Chakhumbira, Feston
Botha, Sara
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_sort Kabuli, Hilda
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is a multi-country initiative that aims to create low-carbon, climate-resilient, and inclusive agricultural systems across 15 nations in sub-Saharan Africa. In Malawi, BRAINS focuses on strengthening the bean, fruit-tree (mango and avocado), beekeeping and insects-for-food-and-feed value chains while mainstreaming gender equality so that women, youth and other marginalised groups both participate in and benefit from climate-resilient agricultural transformation (Kabuli et al., 2025). Malawi’s agricultural sector remains the backbone of rural lives and national food security but is highly exposed to climate variability, reflected in periodic droughts, floods and pest outbreaks that impair smallholder production and incomes (Government of Malawi, 2016a; 2016b). These climatic challenges reinforce longstanding gender inequalities: women undertake a major share of agricultural labour but generally have less access than men to land, finance, extension, improved inputs, and high-value market outlets (World Bank, 2024; UN Women/ AfDB, 2020). The BRAINS baseline quantitative analysis conducted in Nkhotakota and Mwanza districts of Malawi documents these patterns in detail. Men have bigger landholdings and have more access to extension services and formal market channels, whereas women are disproportionately involved in subsistence production, free labour, local markets, and have lower digital access for agro-weather information services, limiting their capacity to adopt climate-smart technologies and to control benefits from these value chains (Kabuli et al., 2025). Female-headed rural households often lose comparatively more income during catastrophic weather events and face systemic impediments in obtaining adaptive finance, technologies and information (FAO, 2024). Gender disparities in land rights and asset ownership also impede women’s ability to invest in long-term, climate-resilient assets such as perennial fruit trees and beekeeping infrastructure (FAO, 2011; World Bank, 2024). This Malawi Gender Strategy responds to these challenges by establishing a structured and evidence-based framework for mainstreaming gender equality and social inclusion throughout all BRAINS activities. It builds on the reach, benefit, empower, and transform framework to ensure that vulnerable and marginalised groups including women, youth, persons with disabilities are not only reached by project activities, but also benefit equitably, gain agency, and contribute to transforming the norms, systems, and institutions that perpetuate inequality.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace180169
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1801692026-01-21T02:17:01Z Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors Kabuli, Hilda Ouya, Frederick Chisale, Virginia Kachigamba, Donald Chakhumbira, Feston Botha, Sara Lutomia, Cosmas Ketema, Dessalegn Nchanji, Eileen empowerment resilience strategies gender analysis The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is a multi-country initiative that aims to create low-carbon, climate-resilient, and inclusive agricultural systems across 15 nations in sub-Saharan Africa. In Malawi, BRAINS focuses on strengthening the bean, fruit-tree (mango and avocado), beekeeping and insects-for-food-and-feed value chains while mainstreaming gender equality so that women, youth and other marginalised groups both participate in and benefit from climate-resilient agricultural transformation (Kabuli et al., 2025). Malawi’s agricultural sector remains the backbone of rural lives and national food security but is highly exposed to climate variability, reflected in periodic droughts, floods and pest outbreaks that impair smallholder production and incomes (Government of Malawi, 2016a; 2016b). These climatic challenges reinforce longstanding gender inequalities: women undertake a major share of agricultural labour but generally have less access than men to land, finance, extension, improved inputs, and high-value market outlets (World Bank, 2024; UN Women/ AfDB, 2020). The BRAINS baseline quantitative analysis conducted in Nkhotakota and Mwanza districts of Malawi documents these patterns in detail. Men have bigger landholdings and have more access to extension services and formal market channels, whereas women are disproportionately involved in subsistence production, free labour, local markets, and have lower digital access for agro-weather information services, limiting their capacity to adopt climate-smart technologies and to control benefits from these value chains (Kabuli et al., 2025). Female-headed rural households often lose comparatively more income during catastrophic weather events and face systemic impediments in obtaining adaptive finance, technologies and information (FAO, 2024). Gender disparities in land rights and asset ownership also impede women’s ability to invest in long-term, climate-resilient assets such as perennial fruit trees and beekeeping infrastructure (FAO, 2011; World Bank, 2024). This Malawi Gender Strategy responds to these challenges by establishing a structured and evidence-based framework for mainstreaming gender equality and social inclusion throughout all BRAINS activities. It builds on the reach, benefit, empower, and transform framework to ensure that vulnerable and marginalised groups including women, youth, persons with disabilities are not only reached by project activities, but also benefit equitably, gain agency, and contribute to transforming the norms, systems, and institutions that perpetuate inequality. 2025-12-28 2026-01-20T07:26:22Z 2026-01-20T07:26:22Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180169 en Open Access application/pdf Kabuli, H.; Ouya, F.; Chisale, V.; Kachigamba, D.; Chakhumbira, F.; Botha, S.; Lutomia, C.; Ketema, D.; Nchanji, E. (2025) Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors. 18 p.
spellingShingle empowerment
resilience
strategies
gender analysis
Kabuli, Hilda
Ouya, Frederick
Chisale, Virginia
Kachigamba, Donald
Chakhumbira, Feston
Botha, Sara
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title_full Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title_fullStr Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title_full_unstemmed Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title_short Malawi gender strategy: Building equitable climate-resilient African bean & insect sectors
title_sort malawi gender strategy building equitable climate resilient african bean insect sectors
topic empowerment
resilience
strategies
gender analysis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180169
work_keys_str_mv AT kabulihilda malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT ouyafrederick malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT chisalevirginia malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT kachigambadonald malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT chakhumbirafeston malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT bothasara malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT lutomiacosmas malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT ketemadessalegn malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors
AT nchanjieileen malawigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeaninsectsectors