Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola

Peru is recorded as the second largest organic cacao producer and the second largest coca producer in the world. Consequently, the demand has made cacao an important alternative crop for coca. Cacao can just be grown around the equator and is therefore an attractive cash-crop for export to countries...

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Autor principal: Emenius, Carin
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2012
Materias:
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author Emenius, Carin
author_browse Emenius, Carin
author_facet Emenius, Carin
author_sort Emenius, Carin
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Peru is recorded as the second largest organic cacao producer and the second largest coca producer in the world. Consequently, the demand has made cacao an important alternative crop for coca. Cacao can just be grown around the equator and is therefore an attractive cash-crop for export to countries in Europe and North America. Therefore governments, enterprises and non-governmental organisations are supporting organic cultivations of cacao. This thesis has the objective to find out the situation of the livelihood of cacao producers in the process of becoming certified cacao producers. What challenges and which hopes were considered by the woman and man in the households? Would there be clear divides of work locations relating to gender, and who was responsible for making the decisions in the family? By the use of semi-structured interviews and participating practical methods, ten families in the district of Irazola in the Peruvian Amazon were selected. The study proved customary roles of women in charge of domestic work, children and small animals while men were more often working in the fields and going to meetings. Off-farm work for women was found to be selling food on the main street, while men were driving taxis and worked as technicians. Decision and opinions were more similar within households than between women and men as a group. Although men often had the main responsibility over money and decision for instance to become part of the certification process. The farmers - women and men - wished to grow more cacao trees so they could afford education for their children, a better house, move to other places, start a restaurant or shop. There have not been many studies of small-holding cacao producers in Latin America and therefore this study is useful to draw examples from without making any generalisations.
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spelling RepoSLU40032012-04-20T14:25:47Z Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola Emenius, Carin cacao livelihoods Amazonas Peru gendered responsibilities transition organic certification Peru is recorded as the second largest organic cacao producer and the second largest coca producer in the world. Consequently, the demand has made cacao an important alternative crop for coca. Cacao can just be grown around the equator and is therefore an attractive cash-crop for export to countries in Europe and North America. Therefore governments, enterprises and non-governmental organisations are supporting organic cultivations of cacao. This thesis has the objective to find out the situation of the livelihood of cacao producers in the process of becoming certified cacao producers. What challenges and which hopes were considered by the woman and man in the households? Would there be clear divides of work locations relating to gender, and who was responsible for making the decisions in the family? By the use of semi-structured interviews and participating practical methods, ten families in the district of Irazola in the Peruvian Amazon were selected. The study proved customary roles of women in charge of domestic work, children and small animals while men were more often working in the fields and going to meetings. Off-farm work for women was found to be selling food on the main street, while men were driving taxis and worked as technicians. Decision and opinions were more similar within households than between women and men as a group. Although men often had the main responsibility over money and decision for instance to become part of the certification process. The farmers - women and men - wished to grow more cacao trees so they could afford education for their children, a better house, move to other places, start a restaurant or shop. There have not been many studies of small-holding cacao producers in Latin America and therefore this study is useful to draw examples from without making any generalisations. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2012 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4003/
spellingShingle cacao
livelihoods
Amazonas
Peru
gendered responsibilities
transition organic certification
Emenius, Carin
Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title_full Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title_fullStr Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title_full_unstemmed Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title_short Livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the Peruvian Amazonas : gendered responsibilities in Irazola
title_sort livelihood and transition to certified cacao production in the peruvian amazonas : gendered responsibilities in irazola
topic cacao
livelihoods
Amazonas
Peru
gendered responsibilities
transition organic certification