Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services

In Tajikistan, where an estimated 75 percent of working women are engaged in agricultural work, there is particularly strong potential for taking steps to close the gender gap in agricultural extension. Here, time-honoured societal norms are largely responsible for preventing rural women from being actively involved in decision-making at household and community levels, and dictate that they should shoulder the major share of domestic chores. An assessment organized to identify gender-related issues in Tajikistan’s rural advisory system revealed a relatively low level of understanding of gender norms and their effect on agriculture, even among extension providers themselves – both women and men. Based on group discussions, it also exposed a hidden barrier in the form of elderly women, who were seen as one of the strongest obstacles to young women accessing agricultural services and resources. This was partly due to the older women’s insistence that the burden of domestic work and care should be undertaken by the younger ones. This intergenerational obstacle was particularly pronounced between mothers-in-law and daughters-in-law, but was the product of a broader patriarchal structure, the session showed.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: FAO
Format: Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet biblioteca
Language:English
Published: FAO ; 2021
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB2944EN
http://www.fao.org/3/cb2944en/cb2944en.pdf
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spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-CB2944EN2024-03-16T15:49:54Z Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services Good practice series - Agricultural extension FAO In Tajikistan, where an estimated 75 percent of working women are engaged in agricultural work, there is particularly strong potential for taking steps to close the gender gap in agricultural extension. Here, time-honoured societal norms are largely responsible for preventing rural women from being actively involved in decision-making at household and community levels, and dictate that they should shoulder the major share of domestic chores. An assessment organized to identify gender-related issues in Tajikistan’s rural advisory system revealed a relatively low level of understanding of gender norms and their effect on agriculture, even among extension providers themselves – both women and men. Based on group discussions, it also exposed a hidden barrier in the form of elderly women, who were seen as one of the strongest obstacles to young women accessing agricultural services and resources. This was partly due to the older women’s insistence that the burden of domestic work and care should be undertaken by the younger ones. This intergenerational obstacle was particularly pronounced between mothers-in-law and daughters-in-law, but was the product of a broader patriarchal structure, the session showed. 2023-04-27T13:32:21Z 2023-04-27T13:32:21Z 2021 2021-10-07T16:17:44.0000000Z Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB2944EN http://www.fao.org/3/cb2944en/cb2944en.pdf English FAO 4p. application/pdf Tajikistan FAO ;
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databasecode dig-fao-it
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libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description In Tajikistan, where an estimated 75 percent of working women are engaged in agricultural work, there is particularly strong potential for taking steps to close the gender gap in agricultural extension. Here, time-honoured societal norms are largely responsible for preventing rural women from being actively involved in decision-making at household and community levels, and dictate that they should shoulder the major share of domestic chores. An assessment organized to identify gender-related issues in Tajikistan’s rural advisory system revealed a relatively low level of understanding of gender norms and their effect on agriculture, even among extension providers themselves – both women and men. Based on group discussions, it also exposed a hidden barrier in the form of elderly women, who were seen as one of the strongest obstacles to young women accessing agricultural services and resources. This was partly due to the older women’s insistence that the burden of domestic work and care should be undertaken by the younger ones. This intergenerational obstacle was particularly pronounced between mothers-in-law and daughters-in-law, but was the product of a broader patriarchal structure, the session showed.
format Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
author FAO
spellingShingle FAO
Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
author_facet FAO
author_sort FAO
title Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
title_short Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
title_full Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
title_fullStr Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
title_full_unstemmed Towards gender equality in Tajikistan's extension services
title_sort towards gender equality in tajikistan's extension services
publisher FAO ;
publishDate 2021
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/CB2944EN
http://www.fao.org/3/cb2944en/cb2944en.pdf
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