Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa

Women’s participation in rice production, postharvest and trading operations is well recognized in Africa (Dey, 1984; Nyanteng, 1985; Akande et al., 2007; WARDA et al., 2008; Bunch, 2011). In West Africa, for example, labour supplied by women for rice cultivation varies from 3% for floating rice in...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Agboh-Noameshie, A.R., Kabore A, Misiko, Michael T.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CAB International 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52012
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author Agboh-Noameshie, A.R.
Kabore A
Misiko, Michael T.
author_browse Agboh-Noameshie, A.R.
Kabore A
Misiko, Michael T.
author_facet Agboh-Noameshie, A.R.
Kabore A
Misiko, Michael T.
author_sort Agboh-Noameshie, A.R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Women’s participation in rice production, postharvest and trading operations is well recognized in Africa (Dey, 1984; Nyanteng, 1985; Akande et al., 2007; WARDA et al., 2008; Bunch, 2011). In West Africa, for example, labour supplied by women for rice cultivation varies from 3% for floating rice in Mali, to 80-100% in mangrove-swamp rice in The Gambia and Liberia, where women participate in most of the activities and undertake postharvest processing of the crop (Huvio, 1998). Also a clear gender division of labour exists among crops. In The Gambia, swampland farming is solely women’s duty; men cultivate cash crops and their fields are usually larger. In Mali, rice was traditionally grown only by women near rivers and wetlands (Synnevag, 1997, cited by FAO, 2004b). In many African countries, women are responsible for producing subsistence food crops for house hold consumption on their own plots or in communal household fields. In Côte d’Iviore, husband and wife farm separate plots and there is some specialization by gender in the crops. Rice is considered a man’s crop in some communities, and a woman’s crop in others, while in many places, the gender pattern for rice cultivation is complex.
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spelling CGSpace520122023-06-08T13:28:45Z Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa Agboh-Noameshie, A.R. Kabore A Misiko, Michael T. climate agriculture rice gender Women’s participation in rice production, postharvest and trading operations is well recognized in Africa (Dey, 1984; Nyanteng, 1985; Akande et al., 2007; WARDA et al., 2008; Bunch, 2011). In West Africa, for example, labour supplied by women for rice cultivation varies from 3% for floating rice in Mali, to 80-100% in mangrove-swamp rice in The Gambia and Liberia, where women participate in most of the activities and undertake postharvest processing of the crop (Huvio, 1998). Also a clear gender division of labour exists among crops. In The Gambia, swampland farming is solely women’s duty; men cultivate cash crops and their fields are usually larger. In Mali, rice was traditionally grown only by women near rivers and wetlands (Synnevag, 1997, cited by FAO, 2004b). In many African countries, women are responsible for producing subsistence food crops for house hold consumption on their own plots or in communal household fields. In Côte d’Iviore, husband and wife farm separate plots and there is some specialization by gender in the crops. Rice is considered a man’s crop in some communities, and a woman’s crop in others, while in many places, the gender pattern for rice cultivation is complex. 2013 2014-12-16T06:37:25Z 2014-12-16T06:37:25Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52012 en Limited Access CAB International Agboh-Noameshie A, Kabore A, Misiko M. 2013. Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa. In: Wopereis M, Johnson D, Ahmadi N, Tollens E, Jalloh A, eds. Realizing Africa's rice promise. Oxfordshire, United Kingdom: CABI. p. 343-354
spellingShingle climate
agriculture
rice
gender
Agboh-Noameshie, A.R.
Kabore A
Misiko, Michael T.
Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title_full Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title_fullStr Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title_short Integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in Africa
title_sort integrating gender considerations in rice research for development in africa
topic climate
agriculture
rice
gender
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52012
work_keys_str_mv AT agbohnoameshiear integratinggenderconsiderationsinriceresearchfordevelopmentinafrica
AT kaborea integratinggenderconsiderationsinriceresearchfordevelopmentinafrica
AT misikomichaelt integratinggenderconsiderationsinriceresearchfordevelopmentinafrica