Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms

Agricultural Extension Services (AES) – defined here as a system of services providing advice, information and training to farmers – are critical for enhancing agricultural productivity and development in Tanzania. Women farmers often face particular constraints to using AES, and consequently have l...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: McCormack, Caitlin
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2018
Materias:
_version_ 1855572232175091712
author McCormack, Caitlin
author_browse McCormack, Caitlin
author_facet McCormack, Caitlin
author_sort McCormack, Caitlin
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Agricultural Extension Services (AES) – defined here as a system of services providing advice, information and training to farmers – are critical for enhancing agricultural productivity and development in Tanzania. Women farmers often face particular constraints to using AES, and consequently have lower levels of access on average than their male counterparts. The constraints women farmers face comprise a range of practical, institutional and norm-based factors. Improving women farmers’ access to and use of AES requires identifying and understanding these constraints and exploring how AES can be designed and delivered to overcome them. In this thesis, I explore women (and men) farmers’ access to and use of AES in two villages in Babati District, Tanzania and identify the critical factors affecting this, with a particular focus on the role of societal gender norms. I also investigate if and how gender is considered within current AES services and explore perceptions of AES practitioners about women farmers as users of AES. Finally, I consider opportunities for (women) farmers to shape AES and how AES may be delivered to better meet their needs. The study is based on empirical data collected during six weeks of fieldwork in Tanzania in March and April 2017. Findings are from group interviews, in-depth individual interviews and observations. The thesis is informed by a liberal feminist perspective and I draw on theory around social norms and institutions, gender norms and relations, and knowledge systems to explore my empirical findings. I find that women farmers’ AES needs and preferences often differ from men farmers’ and that there are multiple factors that affect their willingness and ability to use AES. I argue that many, if not most, of these factors are rooted in societal gender norms. Critically, I also find that current measures within AES to target women farmers do not comprehensively address gender norms and there is an apparent lack of gender capacity amongst institutions and staff involved in providing AES. I conclude that in order to effectively deliver to women farmers and contribute to agricultural development, AES should involve efforts to address the multifaceted ways in which societal gender norms affect AES use and delivery.
format H2
id RepoSLU13367
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU133672020-05-20T11:28:19Z Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms McCormack, Caitlin Agricultural Extension Services gender women farmers Tanzania agriculture Agricultural Extension Services (AES) – defined here as a system of services providing advice, information and training to farmers – are critical for enhancing agricultural productivity and development in Tanzania. Women farmers often face particular constraints to using AES, and consequently have lower levels of access on average than their male counterparts. The constraints women farmers face comprise a range of practical, institutional and norm-based factors. Improving women farmers’ access to and use of AES requires identifying and understanding these constraints and exploring how AES can be designed and delivered to overcome them. In this thesis, I explore women (and men) farmers’ access to and use of AES in two villages in Babati District, Tanzania and identify the critical factors affecting this, with a particular focus on the role of societal gender norms. I also investigate if and how gender is considered within current AES services and explore perceptions of AES practitioners about women farmers as users of AES. Finally, I consider opportunities for (women) farmers to shape AES and how AES may be delivered to better meet their needs. The study is based on empirical data collected during six weeks of fieldwork in Tanzania in March and April 2017. Findings are from group interviews, in-depth individual interviews and observations. The thesis is informed by a liberal feminist perspective and I draw on theory around social norms and institutions, gender norms and relations, and knowledge systems to explore my empirical findings. I find that women farmers’ AES needs and preferences often differ from men farmers’ and that there are multiple factors that affect their willingness and ability to use AES. I argue that many, if not most, of these factors are rooted in societal gender norms. Critically, I also find that current measures within AES to target women farmers do not comprehensively address gender norms and there is an apparent lack of gender capacity amongst institutions and staff involved in providing AES. I conclude that in order to effectively deliver to women farmers and contribute to agricultural development, AES should involve efforts to address the multifaceted ways in which societal gender norms affect AES use and delivery. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2018 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13367/
spellingShingle Agricultural Extension Services
gender
women farmers
Tanzania
agriculture
McCormack, Caitlin
Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title_full Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title_fullStr Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title_full_unstemmed Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title_short Key factors in the use of Agricultural Extension Services by women farmers in Babati District, Tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
title_sort key factors in the use of agricultural extension services by women farmers in babati district, tanzania : the role of societal gender norms
topic Agricultural Extension Services
gender
women farmers
Tanzania
agriculture