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Rethinking how gender matters for food security.

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Title Rethinking how gender matters for food security.
 
Creator Kawarazuka, N.
Locke, C.
Seeley, J.
 
Subject gender
food security
agricultural research
 
Description In agricultural research, gender has been recognised as a critical issue that needs to be addressed to enhance household food security. However, prioritising gender is often taken to signify a focus on women, with most attention given to women’s lack of access to land and resources. Consequently, the complex processes of how gender influences household food security are relatively poorly understood. In contrast, ethnographic evidence shows that both women’s and men’s strategies for household food security are highly gendered and that women’s, as well as men’s, approaches to coping with insecure lives are far more diverse than simply ensuring direct access to economic resources. With reference to this established evidence, we highlight how women and men negotiate for food security, and consider the implications for agricultural research.
 
Date 2017
2019-03-19T20:48:29Z
2019-03-19T20:48:29Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Kawarazuka, N.; Locke, C.; Seeley, J. 2017. Rethinking how gender matters for food security. Agriculture for Development. ISSN 1759-0612. 32. 34-37.
1759-0612
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100352
https://taa.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Ag4Dev32_Web_Version.pdf
 
Language en
 
Rights Other
Open Access
 
Format 34-37
 
Source Agriculture for Development