Gender roles and the potential to tap women's experiences are keys for African economic development. The paper illustrates this potential with a gender analysis of forest product markets in the humid forest zone of Cameroon by describing the functioning of the market and analysing male-female differences. The results confirm that gender is the main basis for differentiating size of business, product specialization, and market strategies among traders. Priorities to improve trade also show some male-female differences. At the same time, there are no consistent difference in profit margins between genders, indicating that trading efficiency is similar, and that, given the right conditions, women entrepreneurs can be as successful as men. The ...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Activities and roles in value chains of forest products in the Congo Basin are highly gendered, vary...
Forest Products (FPs) are numerous and exhaustive processing of some species adds to the number of u...
Millions of people, especially those living in rural areas in developing countries collect Non-Timbe...
Trade-in Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFPs) in the Congo Basin is a source of cash income for stakeh...
•This systematic review of literature on gender and value chains of forest, tree and agroforestry (F...
Marketing of commercially important Non-timber Forest Products (NTFPs) can be a potential source of ...
In Cameroon, women as the primary gatherers and traders of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) have l...
This paper presents a comparative study of forest management across four countries in East Africa an...
In rural societies with strong gender norms and customs, small informal agribusinesses may often be ...
The paper analyses the structure of non-timber forest products (NTFP) markets in the humid forest zo...
Men and women in forest, tree and agroforestry value chains The critical link between gender and for...
This systematic review of literature on gender and value chains of forest, tree and agroforestry (FT...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Activities and roles in value chains of forest products in the Congo Basin are highly gendered, vary...
Forest Products (FPs) are numerous and exhaustive processing of some species adds to the number of u...
Millions of people, especially those living in rural areas in developing countries collect Non-Timbe...
Trade-in Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFPs) in the Congo Basin is a source of cash income for stakeh...
•This systematic review of literature on gender and value chains of forest, tree and agroforestry (F...
Marketing of commercially important Non-timber Forest Products (NTFPs) can be a potential source of ...
In Cameroon, women as the primary gatherers and traders of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) have l...
This paper presents a comparative study of forest management across four countries in East Africa an...
In rural societies with strong gender norms and customs, small informal agribusinesses may often be ...
The paper analyses the structure of non-timber forest products (NTFP) markets in the humid forest zo...
Men and women in forest, tree and agroforestry value chains The critical link between gender and for...
This systematic review of literature on gender and value chains of forest, tree and agroforestry (FT...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...
Forestry management in Uganda has traditionally been a masculine field, although recent years have s...