How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production

Globally, rice cultivation is responsible for 10% of greenhouse gas emissions released by agricultural activities. To sustainably reduce the contribution of rice to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it is important to pursue management and technological options that reduce emissions and improve farmer productivity, adaptation and resilience to climate change impacts. Alternate wetting and drying (AWD) is a water-saving technique that helps farmers adapt to less water availability. It reduces the amount of in-field gas emissions associated with rice production, and it may increase and/or maintain rice productivity levels. The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and partners are conducting several studies to evaluate the feasibility of implementing this technology in Colombia, a country that has committed to reducing economy-wide GHG emissions by 20% under the 2015 Paris Agreement and implementing adaptation plans by 2030. The sustainable implementation of AWD requires an understanding of the economic, climatic, political, agronomic and social considerations within which farmers operate. The literature shows how gender roles can influence the adoption of a technology or be affected by the introduction of a new technology. A baseline study was designed to answer the following questions: how might gender impact the adoption of AWD in Colombia? And how will the adoption of AWD affect the gender division of labor? A household survey with sex-disaggregated information in 609 households in five departments was conducted. The results suggest that women own rice assets and make decisions about production but are not recognized as rice producers. They do not receive agricultural information and do not have group membership in the same proportion as men do. Furthermore, households in which women participate as producers are more likely to have noneconomic incentives and water availability (i.e. no problems with water scarcity) to implement AWD. Women participate in manual weed control as hired labor and men participate more in irrigation, and both activities can be affected by the implementation of AWD. For AWD to be widely implemented in Colombia, it is important to target women as well as men and create awareness of the possible social effects of the technology in gendered labor activities, and therefore in the lives of both women and men.

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Main Authors: García, María Alejandra, Twyman, Jennifer, Katto, María Cristina, LaHue, Gabriel, Chirinda, Ngonidzashe
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2016-12
Subjects:gender, genero, role of women, papel de la mujer, oryza sativa, rice, arroz, decision making, toma de decisiones, labour, trabajo,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81594
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-815942023-02-15T06:26:12Z How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production García, María Alejandra Twyman, Jennifer Katto, María Cristina LaHue, Gabriel Chirinda, Ngonidzashe gender genero role of women papel de la mujer oryza sativa rice arroz decision making toma de decisiones labour trabajo Globally, rice cultivation is responsible for 10% of greenhouse gas emissions released by agricultural activities. To sustainably reduce the contribution of rice to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it is important to pursue management and technological options that reduce emissions and improve farmer productivity, adaptation and resilience to climate change impacts. Alternate wetting and drying (AWD) is a water-saving technique that helps farmers adapt to less water availability. It reduces the amount of in-field gas emissions associated with rice production, and it may increase and/or maintain rice productivity levels. The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and partners are conducting several studies to evaluate the feasibility of implementing this technology in Colombia, a country that has committed to reducing economy-wide GHG emissions by 20% under the 2015 Paris Agreement and implementing adaptation plans by 2030. The sustainable implementation of AWD requires an understanding of the economic, climatic, political, agronomic and social considerations within which farmers operate. The literature shows how gender roles can influence the adoption of a technology or be affected by the introduction of a new technology. A baseline study was designed to answer the following questions: how might gender impact the adoption of AWD in Colombia? And how will the adoption of AWD affect the gender division of labor? A household survey with sex-disaggregated information in 609 households in five departments was conducted. The results suggest that women own rice assets and make decisions about production but are not recognized as rice producers. They do not receive agricultural information and do not have group membership in the same proportion as men do. Furthermore, households in which women participate as producers are more likely to have noneconomic incentives and water availability (i.e. no problems with water scarcity) to implement AWD. Women participate in manual weed control as hired labor and men participate more in irrigation, and both activities can be affected by the implementation of AWD. For AWD to be widely implemented in Colombia, it is important to target women as well as men and create awareness of the possible social effects of the technology in gendered labor activities, and therefore in the lives of both women and men. 2016-12 2017-06-16T12:51:28Z 2017-06-16T12:51:28Z Working Paper García MA; Katto MC; Twyman J; LaHue G; Chirinda N. 2016. How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production. Working Paper. CIAT Publication No. 437. International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Cali, Colombia. 37 p. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81594 en Publicación CIAT Open Access 37 p. application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic gender
genero
role of women
papel de la mujer
oryza sativa
rice
arroz
decision making
toma de decisiones
labour
trabajo
gender
genero
role of women
papel de la mujer
oryza sativa
rice
arroz
decision making
toma de decisiones
labour
trabajo
spellingShingle gender
genero
role of women
papel de la mujer
oryza sativa
rice
arroz
decision making
toma de decisiones
labour
trabajo
gender
genero
role of women
papel de la mujer
oryza sativa
rice
arroz
decision making
toma de decisiones
labour
trabajo
García, María Alejandra
Twyman, Jennifer
Katto, María Cristina
LaHue, Gabriel
Chirinda, Ngonidzashe
How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
description Globally, rice cultivation is responsible for 10% of greenhouse gas emissions released by agricultural activities. To sustainably reduce the contribution of rice to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it is important to pursue management and technological options that reduce emissions and improve farmer productivity, adaptation and resilience to climate change impacts. Alternate wetting and drying (AWD) is a water-saving technique that helps farmers adapt to less water availability. It reduces the amount of in-field gas emissions associated with rice production, and it may increase and/or maintain rice productivity levels. The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and partners are conducting several studies to evaluate the feasibility of implementing this technology in Colombia, a country that has committed to reducing economy-wide GHG emissions by 20% under the 2015 Paris Agreement and implementing adaptation plans by 2030. The sustainable implementation of AWD requires an understanding of the economic, climatic, political, agronomic and social considerations within which farmers operate. The literature shows how gender roles can influence the adoption of a technology or be affected by the introduction of a new technology. A baseline study was designed to answer the following questions: how might gender impact the adoption of AWD in Colombia? And how will the adoption of AWD affect the gender division of labor? A household survey with sex-disaggregated information in 609 households in five departments was conducted. The results suggest that women own rice assets and make decisions about production but are not recognized as rice producers. They do not receive agricultural information and do not have group membership in the same proportion as men do. Furthermore, households in which women participate as producers are more likely to have noneconomic incentives and water availability (i.e. no problems with water scarcity) to implement AWD. Women participate in manual weed control as hired labor and men participate more in irrigation, and both activities can be affected by the implementation of AWD. For AWD to be widely implemented in Colombia, it is important to target women as well as men and create awareness of the possible social effects of the technology in gendered labor activities, and therefore in the lives of both women and men.
format Working Paper
topic_facet gender
genero
role of women
papel de la mujer
oryza sativa
rice
arroz
decision making
toma de decisiones
labour
trabajo
author García, María Alejandra
Twyman, Jennifer
Katto, María Cristina
LaHue, Gabriel
Chirinda, Ngonidzashe
author_facet García, María Alejandra
Twyman, Jennifer
Katto, María Cristina
LaHue, Gabriel
Chirinda, Ngonidzashe
author_sort García, María Alejandra
title How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
title_short How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
title_full How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
title_fullStr How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
title_full_unstemmed How might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for Colombian rice production? : Report of gender dimensions in Colombian rice production
title_sort how might the gender roles affect the implementation of a new water-saving technique for colombian rice production? : report of gender dimensions in colombian rice production
publisher International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publishDate 2016-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81594
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