Hello guest
Your basket is empty
We provide two pathways to the content. Thematic (chapters that address certain themes, e.g. cultivation, regardless of crop or animal type) and Product (chapters that relate to a specific type of crop or animal). Choose the most applicable route to find the right collection for you. 
 
Can’t find what you are looking for? Contact us and let us help you build a custom-made collection. 
You are in: All categories > A-Z Chapters > S
Use the Contact form to discuss the best purchasing method for you... Start building your collection today!

Socio-cultural factors affecting women smallholder farmers’ empowerment in Uganda

Code: 9781835452790
Brenda Boonabaana, The University of Texas at Austin, USA; Florence Kyoheirwe Muhanguzi, Losira Nasirumbi Sanya, Susan Namirembe Kavuma, Grace Kyomuhendo Bantebya and Pius Okello, Makerere University, Uganda; Laura Meinzen-Dick, Villanova University, USA; and Nargiza Ludgate, University of Florida, USA

Chapter synopsis:

Promoting women’s empowerment and gender equality plays a key role in accelerating equitable and sustainable agricultural systems in Africa, yet efforts to better integrate women in agricultural development often ignore the underlying social-economic drivers that underpin gender inequalities. This chapter uses primary data generated through the mixed methods approach, and the project-specific Women Empowerment in Agriculture Index (pro-WEAI). It also utilises rich secondary evidence from the region. Complex interconnections between women empowerment, social-cultural dynamics and agricultural opportunities in Uganda and Africa are also explored. Findings depict that the major disempowering drivers for rural women small holder farmers are more aligned to instrumental and intrinsic agency driven by social-cultural gendered power relations. The authors conclude that social and gender norms, rooted in the capitalist-patriarchal system limit women’s agency and agricultural opportunities. They recommend a gender responsive agricultural policy environment grounded in a transformative agenda that addresses the underlying gender inequalities.



DOI: 10.19103/AS.2024.0148.05
£25.00
Table of contents
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Methodology
  • 3 Findings
  • 4 Social-cultural gender dynamics and womensempowerment: implications for gender-equitableagriculture in Uganda and beyond
  • 5 Conclusion and recommendations
  • 6 Acknowledgement and disclaimer statement
  • 7 Where to look for further information
  • 8 References

Also in S