Agricultural development efforts that do not address persistent gender gaps miss opportunities for greater impact. This synthesis reflects on key findings from integrated quantitative and qualitative analyses at the nexus of gender, agricultural development, and climate change. Linked farm household-, intrahousehold-, community-, and institutional-level data highlight significant and nuanced gender differences in adaptive capacity of individuals and communities to respond to climate change. The gender gap is also substantial in exposure to climate change and its impacts, and uptake of new practices that lower vulnerability. Women in agriculture will remain largely neglected by information and service providers unless their differing needs, ...
The impacts of climate variability and change impinge upon different lives and livelihoods within ag...
In Uganda, Ghana and Bangladesh, participatory tools were used for a socio-economic and gender analy...
People, places, and production contributing the least to climate change will suffer the most. This c...
Agricultural development efforts that do not address persistent gender gaps miss opportunities for g...
Climate change does not affect everyone in the same way. Men and women are affected differently. The...
Women and men differ, that much is obvious. But many of the ways in which society treats men and wom...
In many developing countries, female farmers comprise up to half or more of the agricultural workfo...
Women face barriers that significantly constrain their production and entangle them in a low product...
In the upcoming years, the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (...
Agriculture is the largest employment sector for 60% of women in Oceania, Southern Asia and sub-Saha...
This book presents the gender dimensions of the relationship between agriculture and climate change....
Climate change influences agricultural production and threatens the livelihoods of farming household...
Adaptation and mitigation are two key responses to climate change. In the global South they prompt m...
Research suggests that gender equity is a critical factor in the adoption of climate-smart agricultu...
It is widely accepted that agricultural development will be severely curtailed without addressing th...
The impacts of climate variability and change impinge upon different lives and livelihoods within ag...
In Uganda, Ghana and Bangladesh, participatory tools were used for a socio-economic and gender analy...
People, places, and production contributing the least to climate change will suffer the most. This c...
Agricultural development efforts that do not address persistent gender gaps miss opportunities for g...
Climate change does not affect everyone in the same way. Men and women are affected differently. The...
Women and men differ, that much is obvious. But many of the ways in which society treats men and wom...
In many developing countries, female farmers comprise up to half or more of the agricultural workfo...
Women face barriers that significantly constrain their production and entangle them in a low product...
In the upcoming years, the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (...
Agriculture is the largest employment sector for 60% of women in Oceania, Southern Asia and sub-Saha...
This book presents the gender dimensions of the relationship between agriculture and climate change....
Climate change influences agricultural production and threatens the livelihoods of farming household...
Adaptation and mitigation are two key responses to climate change. In the global South they prompt m...
Research suggests that gender equity is a critical factor in the adoption of climate-smart agricultu...
It is widely accepted that agricultural development will be severely curtailed without addressing th...
The impacts of climate variability and change impinge upon different lives and livelihoods within ag...
In Uganda, Ghana and Bangladesh, participatory tools were used for a socio-economic and gender analy...
People, places, and production contributing the least to climate change will suffer the most. This c...