Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia

This study explores the role of gender-based decision-making in the adoption of improved maize varieties. The primary data were collected in 2018 from 560 farm households in Dawuro Zone, Ethiopia, and were comparatively analyzed across gender categories of households: male decision-making, female decision-making and joint decision-making, using a double-hurdle model. The results show that the intensity of improved maize varieties adopted on plots managed by male, female, and joint decision-making households are significantly different. This effect diminishes in the model when we take other factors into account. Using the gender of the heads of households and agricultural decision-maker, the current study did not find significant evidence of gender difference in the rate and intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties. The intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties is lower for female-headed households where decisions are made jointly by men and women, compared to the male-headed households where decisions are made jointly. As the economic status is a key driver of adoption of improved maize varieties, it is recommended that the policies and programs that aim at developing and disseminating quality maize seeds in southern Ethiopia should emphatically support economically less endowed but more gender egalitarian joint decision-making households, especially female-headed ones.

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Main Authors: Gebre, G.G., Hiroshi Isoda, Rahut, D.B., Yuichiro Amekawa, Hisako Nomura
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, GENDER, DECISION MAKING, INNOVATION ADOPTION, MAIZE, VARIETIES,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20227
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-202272021-03-31T14:27:15Z Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia Gebre, G.G. Hiroshi Isoda Rahut, D.B. Yuichiro Amekawa Hisako Nomura AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY GENDER DECISION MAKING INNOVATION ADOPTION MAIZE VARIETIES This study explores the role of gender-based decision-making in the adoption of improved maize varieties. The primary data were collected in 2018 from 560 farm households in Dawuro Zone, Ethiopia, and were comparatively analyzed across gender categories of households: male decision-making, female decision-making and joint decision-making, using a double-hurdle model. The results show that the intensity of improved maize varieties adopted on plots managed by male, female, and joint decision-making households are significantly different. This effect diminishes in the model when we take other factors into account. Using the gender of the heads of households and agricultural decision-maker, the current study did not find significant evidence of gender difference in the rate and intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties. The intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties is lower for female-headed households where decisions are made jointly by men and women, compared to the male-headed households where decisions are made jointly. As the economic status is a key driver of adoption of improved maize varieties, it is recommended that the policies and programs that aim at developing and disseminating quality maize seeds in southern Ethiopia should emphatically support economically less endowed but more gender egalitarian joint decision-making households, especially female-headed ones. 2019-09-18T00:15:23Z 2019-09-18T00:15:23Z 2019 Article Published Version 0277-5395 (Print) https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20227 10.1016/j.wsif.2019.102264 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF ETHIOPIA Amsterdam (Netherlands) Elsevier art. 102264 76 Women's Studies International Forum
institution CIMMYT
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country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
GENDER
DECISION MAKING
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
VARIETIES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
GENDER
DECISION MAKING
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
VARIETIES
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
GENDER
DECISION MAKING
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
VARIETIES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
GENDER
DECISION MAKING
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
VARIETIES
Gebre, G.G.
Hiroshi Isoda
Rahut, D.B.
Yuichiro Amekawa
Hisako Nomura
Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
description This study explores the role of gender-based decision-making in the adoption of improved maize varieties. The primary data were collected in 2018 from 560 farm households in Dawuro Zone, Ethiopia, and were comparatively analyzed across gender categories of households: male decision-making, female decision-making and joint decision-making, using a double-hurdle model. The results show that the intensity of improved maize varieties adopted on plots managed by male, female, and joint decision-making households are significantly different. This effect diminishes in the model when we take other factors into account. Using the gender of the heads of households and agricultural decision-maker, the current study did not find significant evidence of gender difference in the rate and intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties. The intensity of adoption of improved maize varieties is lower for female-headed households where decisions are made jointly by men and women, compared to the male-headed households where decisions are made jointly. As the economic status is a key driver of adoption of improved maize varieties, it is recommended that the policies and programs that aim at developing and disseminating quality maize seeds in southern Ethiopia should emphatically support economically less endowed but more gender egalitarian joint decision-making households, especially female-headed ones.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
GENDER
DECISION MAKING
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
VARIETIES
author Gebre, G.G.
Hiroshi Isoda
Rahut, D.B.
Yuichiro Amekawa
Hisako Nomura
author_facet Gebre, G.G.
Hiroshi Isoda
Rahut, D.B.
Yuichiro Amekawa
Hisako Nomura
author_sort Gebre, G.G.
title Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
title_short Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
title_full Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern Ethiopia
title_sort gender differences in the adoption of agricultural technology: the case of improved maize varieties in southern ethiopia
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/20227
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