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DISCUSSION No. 142 • FSN Forum digest No. 1308
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Rural women: striving for gender transformative impacts
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until 6 August
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Dear Members,
The online discussion
Rural women: striving for gender transformative impacts keeps attracting comments, and we are happy to provide you with an update
today.
Participants from all over the world are discussing the situation of rural women in their countries. In addition, they
are exchanging ideas on what should be done to achieve lasting improvements in the quality of life of these women and their families, often commenting on each other's posts.
To read the contributions in full and for the introduction to the topic, please refer to the FSN Forum website in
English,
French or
Spanish.
Please send your comments to
[log in to unmask] or post them online
upon registration.
We hope you will keep sending us your valuable input on this important topic!
Your FSN Forum team
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CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED
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Kanchan
Lama, WOCAN, Nepal
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Kanchan discusses constraints Nepalese women face in accessing inputs and services, and in being autonomous in making
decisions. She also discusses the Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Strategy that has been developed to mainstream gender equality issues in the National Agricultural Development Strategy, and what needs to be done further to give women farmers the attention
they deserve. Furthermore, she shares a story about a Nepalese indigenous woman who, encouraged by a female extension worker, has been able to successfully adopt an improved rice variety, leading to higher productivity and an improved relationship with her
family, which initially strongly resisted the idea.
Read
the contribution
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Mahtab
S. Bamji, Dangoria Charitable Trust, India
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Mahtab stresses that the gender-specific roles where women lose out are deeply entrenched in the mind-set of both women
and men. She illustrates this by referring to an experience she had at a primary school: talking with the girls revealed that these girls themselves believed it to be “normal” that they had to carry out household tasks and that their brothers were not asked
to do so. Changing this mind-set requires including the subject of gender equality in school curricula.
Read
the contribution
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Muhammad
Raza, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan
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Muhammad argues that among the reasons why agriculture is underperforming in many developing countries, is the fact that
women lack access to the resources and opportunities they need to make the most productive use of their time.
Read
the contribution
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Rieky
Stuart, Canada
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Rieky points out that one of the issues that has not yet been raised, is the difficulty of entrepreneurship in general,
and farm entrepreneurship in particular. Women may face additional challenges in lacking mobility to access more distant markets and having less ability to re-allocate or postpone household and care work. Women’s enterprises may need additional support in
terms of local, timely availability of inputs, and processing and marketing support.
Read
the contribution
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Atika
Marouf, Seed Development Project, Sudan
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In her second contribution to the discussion, Atika stresses that at the institutional level, project staff should be
mobilized to promote gender mainstreaming in policy and programme implementation. At the community level, women need to be trained in business skills in order to be prepared for engaging with the private sector.
Read
the contribution
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Cathy
Farnworth, Pandia Consulting, Germany
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Cathy refers to her research that focuses on Nepal, which suggests that in the surveyed community some of the strongest
women innovators have secured the support of their extended family. Conversely, single women without extended family support networks may not benefit from support networks and the material resources associated with these, and thus find it harder to maintain
innovatory practice. Furthermore, in responding to the comments by Nancy McCarthy, she shares the abstract of a forthcoming paper on the potential of household methodologies for improving intra-household cooperation.
Read
the contribution
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Huda
Abouh, World Food Programme, Sudan
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Huda highlights that people working in communities, community leaders and local authorities should focus on social and
behaviour change communication.
Read
the contribution
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Libor
Stloukal, FAO, Italy
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In his first contribution, Libor provides feedback on behalf of the gender team in FAO, and shares a research paper published
by FAO and the World Bank which assesses available evidence regarding the feminization of agriculture. He argues that seemingly, women’s growing labour force participation in agriculture does not necessarily translate into an improvement in their well-being.
Further research is needed to understand under what conditions women’s expanding roles in agriculture actually lead to welfare improvements and a greater gender equality in access to resources and human capital.
Read
the first contribution
Download
the paper
In his second contribution, Libor stresses the important role of agricultural policies in closing the gender gap in rural
societies. He outlines a number of actions to be undertaken in order to make agricultural policies work for women farmers, such as ensuring that agricultural policy makers are mandated to address rural gender inequalities. Furthermore, he discusses the FAO
Gender in Agricultural Policies Assessment Tool, which aims to help national stakeholders understand how agricultural policies affect rural women and what kind of policy action may be needed to make existing policies more gender sensitive.
Read
the second contribution
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Andrea
Sánchez Enciso, FAO, Italy
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On behalf of the FAO Dimitra team, Andrea shares information on the FAO Dimitra Clubs, which has adopted an approach
based on gender equality and community mobilization in order to facilitate rural people’s empowerment. The Clubs have particularly boosted the self-esteem and leadership of rural women and encouraged more equitable relations between women and men. Andrea argues
that transformative change can be achieved if interventions are not solely focused on empowering women economically, but also aim to trigger processes of change that gradually lead to changes in social norms impeding women to progress on an equal foot as men.
Read
the contribution
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Sofie
Isenberg, FAO, Italy
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According to Sofie, efforts to empower women often fail due to assumptions about women’s needs that do not take into
consideration their situation or their own agency and preferences. Responding to Ekaterine Gurgenidze’s earlier question of how we can help rural women gain self-respect and let them understand their importance, she reiterates “an often-cited but rarely implemented
solution: include rural women in the conversation”. Referring to Andrea’s contribution on the FAO Dimitra project, Sofie underlines that the Dimitra Clubs are a rare example of the radical potential benefits of putting communication at the centre of efforts
to empower women.
Read
the contribution
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Sosan
Aziz, Economic Transformation Initiative Gilgit Baltistan, Pakistan
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Sosan points out that the context of rural livelihoods has significantly changed during the past twenty years. While
female farmers were uneducated twenty years ago, the current generation of women farmers consists of educated youth, which is interested in entrepreneurial activities. Different and innovative approaches will be needed to cater for both groups of women.
Read
the contribution
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