Record Details

Women farmers and Andean seeds

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Field Value
 
Title Women farmers and Andean seeds
 
Creator Tapia, M.E.
Torre, A. de la
 
Subject farmers
storage
agriculture
uses
women
role of women
plant resources
resources
seeds
biodiversity
varieties
 
Description In rural areas, the conservation and use of plant genetic resources begins with women. As smallholder farmers, women are involved in all areas of the crop cycle from seed selection to planting, harvest, storage and processing. Within the household, women are responsible for food needs and welfare, including the gathering and utilization of food, fodder, fuel, medicinal plants and fibre. In these roles, women often determine which plant resources to conserve and use, which crop varieties to grow, which food products to keep for home consumption and which to sell at the local market. As illustrated by this case study of women farmers and seed in the Andes, rural women have a special interest in the diverse and multiple uses of plants and other biological resources, given their varied and complex responsibilities in rural households. The knowledge acquired as managers of these resources for livelihood, health and food security constitutes a knowledge system that both ensures subsistence and community needs, and contributes to the conservation and use of local varieties
 
Date 1998
2019-10-15T15:40:36Z
2019-10-15T15:40:36Z
 
Type Working Paper
 
Identifier Tapia, M.E., De la Torre, A. (1998) Women farmers and Andean seeds. n. 45 p. ISBN: 978-92-9043-378-1, ISBN: 92-9043-378-7
978-92-9043-378-1
92-9043-378-7
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/104293
https://www.bioversityinternational.org/e-library/publications/detail/women-farmers-and-andean-seeds/
 
Language en
 
Rights Open Access
 
Format application/pdf