Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors

The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is driving sustainable change across 15 Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, including Burundi. The agricultural sector in Burundi remains the backbone of the rural population, enhancing food and nutrition secu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette, Ndabashinze, Blaise, Ouya, Frederick, Lutomia, Cosmas, Ketema, Dessalegn, Nchanji, Eileen
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180392
_version_ 1855528104140734464
author Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette
Ndabashinze, Blaise
Ouya, Frederick
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_browse Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette
Ketema, Dessalegn
Lutomia, Cosmas
Nchanji, Eileen
Ndabashinze, Blaise
Ouya, Frederick
author_facet Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette
Ndabashinze, Blaise
Ouya, Frederick
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
author_sort Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is driving sustainable change across 15 Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, including Burundi. The agricultural sector in Burundi remains the backbone of the rural population, enhancing food and nutrition security, household income, and job creation, with smallholder farmers depending mainly on rain-fed production systems (Nyamweru et al., 2024). However, the sector is increasingly subject to climate variability, including prolonged dry spells, irregular rainfall, pest and disease outbreaks, and weather-induced production shocks that affect production efficiency, market returns, and household resilience (Mperejekumana et al., 2023). These climate hazards overlap with longstanding socio-cultural and institutional inequities, including unequal access to land, financing, extension services, agro-weather information, and market opportunities, which disproportionately affect women, youth, people living with disabilities (PLWDs), and other marginalised farmers engaged across the value chains targeted by the project. Despite women’s significant contributions to agricultural labour, particularly in planting, harvesting, processing, and household food provision, they persistently face institutional barriers regarding resource access, decision-making power, and involvement in high-value market segments (Bamber et al., 2014). Men still maintain predominant control over land ownership, production choices, and revenue from commercial ventures, whilst youths encounter obstacles related to asset ownership, financial accessibility, and prospects for enterprise initiation (Niragira et al., 2011). These gendered inequalities limit the adoption of climate-smart innovations, diminish adaptive ability, and constrain equitable participation in developing market opportunities within the BRAINS project’s preferred common bean, fruit tree, and insect for food and feed value chains (Nchanji et al., 2023; Nchanji et al., 2024). The BRAINS project targets transforming the common bean, fruit tree, and insect for food and feed sectors by fostering low-carbon, climate-resilient systems and economies. The project is also committed to enhancing climate-resilient agricultural systems, promoting the adoption of climate-smart agriculture (CSA) technologies, and building a pipeline of enterprises actively investing in carbon-neutral, climate-resilient, socially inclusive agricultural systems and gender-responsive business development, in line with emerging goals of the climate finance sector. The Burundi Gender Strategy adopts the regional gender strategy through the broader Reach, Benefit, Empower, and Transform (RBET) framework, gender-transformative socio-technical innovation bundles (GTSTIBs), and inclusive value-chain development approaches adapted to the national context, also drawing from country-specific quantitative evidence
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace180392
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1803922026-01-23T02:08:54Z Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette Ndabashinze, Blaise Ouya, Frederick Lutomia, Cosmas Ketema, Dessalegn Nchanji, Eileen empowerment food security gender analysis resilience-resilience to shocks and crises The Building Equitable Climate-Resilient African Bean and Insect Sectors (BRAINS) project is driving sustainable change across 15 Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, including Burundi. The agricultural sector in Burundi remains the backbone of the rural population, enhancing food and nutrition security, household income, and job creation, with smallholder farmers depending mainly on rain-fed production systems (Nyamweru et al., 2024). However, the sector is increasingly subject to climate variability, including prolonged dry spells, irregular rainfall, pest and disease outbreaks, and weather-induced production shocks that affect production efficiency, market returns, and household resilience (Mperejekumana et al., 2023). These climate hazards overlap with longstanding socio-cultural and institutional inequities, including unequal access to land, financing, extension services, agro-weather information, and market opportunities, which disproportionately affect women, youth, people living with disabilities (PLWDs), and other marginalised farmers engaged across the value chains targeted by the project. Despite women’s significant contributions to agricultural labour, particularly in planting, harvesting, processing, and household food provision, they persistently face institutional barriers regarding resource access, decision-making power, and involvement in high-value market segments (Bamber et al., 2014). Men still maintain predominant control over land ownership, production choices, and revenue from commercial ventures, whilst youths encounter obstacles related to asset ownership, financial accessibility, and prospects for enterprise initiation (Niragira et al., 2011). These gendered inequalities limit the adoption of climate-smart innovations, diminish adaptive ability, and constrain equitable participation in developing market opportunities within the BRAINS project’s preferred common bean, fruit tree, and insect for food and feed value chains (Nchanji et al., 2023; Nchanji et al., 2024). The BRAINS project targets transforming the common bean, fruit tree, and insect for food and feed sectors by fostering low-carbon, climate-resilient systems and economies. The project is also committed to enhancing climate-resilient agricultural systems, promoting the adoption of climate-smart agriculture (CSA) technologies, and building a pipeline of enterprises actively investing in carbon-neutral, climate-resilient, socially inclusive agricultural systems and gender-responsive business development, in line with emerging goals of the climate finance sector. The Burundi Gender Strategy adopts the regional gender strategy through the broader Reach, Benefit, Empower, and Transform (RBET) framework, gender-transformative socio-technical innovation bundles (GTSTIBs), and inclusive value-chain development approaches adapted to the national context, also drawing from country-specific quantitative evidence 2025-12-28 2026-01-22T10:20:36Z 2026-01-22T10:20:36Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180392 en Open Access application/pdf Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture Hakizimana, M.B.; Ndabashinze, B.; Ouya, F.; Lutomia, C.; Ketema, D.; Nchanji, E. (2025) Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors. Nairobi (Kenya): Bioversity International and International Center for Tropical Agriculture. 18 p.
spellingShingle empowerment
food security
gender analysis
resilience-resilience to shocks and crises
Hakizimana, Marie Bernadette
Ndabashinze, Blaise
Ouya, Frederick
Lutomia, Cosmas
Ketema, Dessalegn
Nchanji, Eileen
Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_full Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_fullStr Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_full_unstemmed Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_short Burundi Gender Strategy: Building equitable climate resilient African bean and insect sectors
title_sort burundi gender strategy building equitable climate resilient african bean and insect sectors
topic empowerment
food security
gender analysis
resilience-resilience to shocks and crises
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180392
work_keys_str_mv AT hakizimanamariebernadette burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors
AT ndabashinzeblaise burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors
AT ouyafrederick burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors
AT lutomiacosmas burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors
AT ketemadessalegn burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors
AT nchanjieileen burundigenderstrategybuildingequitableclimateresilientafricanbeanandinsectsectors