Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda

A recent study suggests that women are significantly less aware of climate information than men in all provinces of Rwanda (Coulibaly et al., 2017). This gap may be associated with ownership of communication assets and participation in social groups as means of communication of the information where...

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Autores principales: Nsengiyumva, Gloriose, Kagabo, Desire, Gumucio, Tatiana
Formato: Póster
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96528
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author Nsengiyumva, Gloriose
Kagabo, Desire
Gumucio, Tatiana
author_browse Gumucio, Tatiana
Kagabo, Desire
Nsengiyumva, Gloriose
author_facet Nsengiyumva, Gloriose
Kagabo, Desire
Gumucio, Tatiana
author_sort Nsengiyumva, Gloriose
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A recent study suggests that women are significantly less aware of climate information than men in all provinces of Rwanda (Coulibaly et al., 2017). This gap may be associated with ownership of communication assets and participation in social groups as means of communication of the information where women are far behind men (Coulibaly et al., 2017). In Rwandan agriculture, women represent the highest proportion (90.8% by NISR, 2013), therefore increasing access and uptake of climate information among women will improve their planning and farm management decisions.
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spelling CGSpace965282024-01-23T12:05:02Z Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda Nsengiyumva, Gloriose Kagabo, Desire Gumucio, Tatiana climate change agriculture food security A recent study suggests that women are significantly less aware of climate information than men in all provinces of Rwanda (Coulibaly et al., 2017). This gap may be associated with ownership of communication assets and participation in social groups as means of communication of the information where women are far behind men (Coulibaly et al., 2017). In Rwandan agriculture, women represent the highest proportion (90.8% by NISR, 2013), therefore increasing access and uptake of climate information among women will improve their planning and farm management decisions. 2018-07-31 2018-08-10T20:27:46Z 2018-08-10T20:27:46Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96528 en Open Access application/pdf Nsengiyumva G, Kagabo DM, Gumucio T. 2018. Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda. Poster presented at the Gender Summit - Africa: Climate change through the gender lens, Kigali, Rwanda, 19-20 March 2018. Kigali, Rwanda: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
Nsengiyumva, Gloriose
Kagabo, Desire
Gumucio, Tatiana
Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title_full Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title_fullStr Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title_short Exploring pathways for gender-responsive climate services in Rwanda
title_sort exploring pathways for gender responsive climate services in rwanda
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96528
work_keys_str_mv AT nsengiyumvagloriose exploringpathwaysforgenderresponsiveclimateservicesinrwanda
AT kagabodesire exploringpathwaysforgenderresponsiveclimateservicesinrwanda
AT gumuciotatiana exploringpathwaysforgenderresponsiveclimateservicesinrwanda