ABSTRACT

Over the past two decades, existing documentation of women in the agricultural sector has surveyed topics such as agricultural restructuring and land reform, international trade agreements and food trade, land ownership and rural development and rural feminisms. Many studies have focused on either the high-income countries of the global North or the low-income countries of the global South. This separation suggests that the North has little to learn from the South, or that there is little shared commonality across the global dividing line.

Fletcher and Kubik cross this political, economic, and ideological division by drawing together authors from 5 continents. They discuss the situation for women in agriculture in 13 countries worldwide, with two chapters that cover international contexts. The authors blur the boundaries between academic and organizational authors and their contributors include university-based researchers, gender experts, development consultants, and staff of agricultural research centers and international organizations (i.e., Oxfam, the United Nations World Food Program). The common thread connecting these diverse authors is an emphasis on practical and concrete solutions to address the challenges, such as lack of access to resources and infrastructure, lack of household decision-making power, and gender biases in policymaking and leadership, still faced by women in agriculture around the world. Ongoing issues in climate change will exacerbate many of these issues and several chapters also address environment and sustainability.

This book is of great interest to readers in the areas of gender studies, agriculture, policy studies, environmental studies, development and international studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction Context and commonality

Women in agriculture worldwide

part 1|65 pages

Women's agricultural work

chapter 1|10 pages

Australia Understanding the “local” and “global”

Intersections engendering change for women in family farming in Australia

chapter 4|21 pages

International4 The System of Rice Intensification and its impacts on women

Reducing pain, discomfort, and labor in rice farming while enhancing households' food security

part 2|53 pages

Gendering sustainability and food security

chapter 6|12 pages

Zimbabwe6 “Livelihoods in a sack”

Gendered dimensions of sack potato farming among poor households in urban Zimbabwe

chapter 7|13 pages

Burkina Faso7 Diversifying the garden

A way to ensure food security and women's empowerment

part 3|75 pages

Women's empowerment in policy and finance

chapter 9|14 pages

Tanzania Improving agricultural land security for women

Assessing the FAO's Voluntary Guidelines on Land Tenure

chapter 10|13 pages

Tanzania10 Addressing challenges of rural women

A focus on Tanzania

chapter 11|17 pages

Kenya11 Can sustainability be enGENDERed through informal microfinance?

A case study of the Kamba merry-go-rounds in Ukambani, Eastern Province, Kenya

chapter 13|18 pages

International13 The rise of institutional food procurement

A tool for empowering women or furthering the status quo?

part 4|61 pages

Working for social change

chapter 14|16 pages

Morocco14 From empowerment to transformative leadership

Intersectional analysis of women workers in the strawberry sector of Morocco

chapter 15|15 pages

United States of America15 Building power through community

Women creating and theorizing change

chapter 16|17 pages

Canada16 Ploughing new ground

A feminist interpretation of youth farm internships in Ontario, Canada