Gender bias affects forests worldwide

Gender biases persist in forestry research and practice. These biases result in reduced scientific rigor and inequitable, ineffective, and less efficient policies, programs, and interventions. Drawing from a two-volume collection of current and classic analyses on gender in forests, we outline five...

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Autores principales: Elias, Marlène, Stevens Hummel, S., Basnett, B.S., Colfer, C.J.P.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Society of Ethnobiology 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89631
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author Elias, Marlène
Stevens Hummel, S.
Basnett, B.S.
Colfer, C.J.P.
author_browse Basnett, B.S.
Colfer, C.J.P.
Elias, Marlène
Stevens Hummel, S.
author_facet Elias, Marlène
Stevens Hummel, S.
Basnett, B.S.
Colfer, C.J.P.
author_sort Elias, Marlène
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Gender biases persist in forestry research and practice. These biases result in reduced scientific rigor and inequitable, ineffective, and less efficient policies, programs, and interventions. Drawing from a two-volume collection of current and classic analyses on gender in forests, we outline five persistent and inter-related themes: gendered governance, tree tenure, forest spaces, division of labor, and ecological knowledge. Each emerges across geographic regions in the northern and southern hemisphere and reflects inequities in women’s and men’s ability to make decisions about and benefit from trees, forests, and their products. Women’s ability to participate in community-based forest governance is typically less than men’s, causing concern for social equity and forest stewardship. Women’s access to trees and their products is commonly more limited than men’s, and mediated by their relationship with their male counterparts. Spatial patterns of forest use reflect gender norms and taboos, and men’s greater access to transportation. The division of labor results in gender specialization in the collection of forest products, with variations in gender roles across regions. All these gender differences result in ecological knowledge that is distinct but also complementary and shifting across the genders. The ways gender plays out in relation to each theme may vary across cultures and contexts, but the influence of gender, which intersects with other factors of social differentiation in shaping forest landscapes, is global.
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spelling CGSpace896312025-11-12T05:47:19Z Gender bias affects forests worldwide Elias, Marlène Stevens Hummel, S. Basnett, B.S. Colfer, C.J.P. gender governance tenure labour allocation indigenous knowledge forestry Gender biases persist in forestry research and practice. These biases result in reduced scientific rigor and inequitable, ineffective, and less efficient policies, programs, and interventions. Drawing from a two-volume collection of current and classic analyses on gender in forests, we outline five persistent and inter-related themes: gendered governance, tree tenure, forest spaces, division of labor, and ecological knowledge. Each emerges across geographic regions in the northern and southern hemisphere and reflects inequities in women’s and men’s ability to make decisions about and benefit from trees, forests, and their products. Women’s ability to participate in community-based forest governance is typically less than men’s, causing concern for social equity and forest stewardship. Women’s access to trees and their products is commonly more limited than men’s, and mediated by their relationship with their male counterparts. Spatial patterns of forest use reflect gender norms and taboos, and men’s greater access to transportation. The division of labor results in gender specialization in the collection of forest products, with variations in gender roles across regions. All these gender differences result in ecological knowledge that is distinct but also complementary and shifting across the genders. The ways gender plays out in relation to each theme may vary across cultures and contexts, but the influence of gender, which intersects with other factors of social differentiation in shaping forest landscapes, is global. 2017 2017-12-05T13:34:11Z 2017-12-05T13:34:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89631 en Open Access application/pdf Society of Ethnobiology Elias, M.; Stevens Hummel, S.; Basnett, B.S.; Colfer, C.J.P. (2017) Gender bias affects forests worldwide. Ethnobiology Letters 8(1) p.31–34. ISSN: 2159-8126
spellingShingle gender
governance
tenure
labour allocation
indigenous knowledge
forestry
Elias, Marlène
Stevens Hummel, S.
Basnett, B.S.
Colfer, C.J.P.
Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title_full Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title_fullStr Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title_full_unstemmed Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title_short Gender bias affects forests worldwide
title_sort gender bias affects forests worldwide
topic gender
governance
tenure
labour allocation
indigenous knowledge
forestry
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89631
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