This paper reports findings from a qualitative study undertaken in Tanzania and Kenya to examine women’s access to and ownership of KickStart pumps and the implications for their ability to make major decisions on crop choices and use of income from irrigated crops. Results from sales-monitoring data show that women purchase less than 10 percent of the pumps and men continue to make most of the major decisions on crop choices and income use. These findings vary by type of crop, with men making major decisions on high-income crops such as tomatoes and women having relatively more autonomy on crops such as leafy vegetables.Non-PRIFPRI1; GAAP; CRP2; G Cross-cutting gender themePHND; PIMCGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Mark...
In sub-Saharan countries, male farmers are frequently seen as producers of cash crops and marketable...
The factors that hinder farm intensification process among smallholders in Kenya are many and varied...
Inadequate and poor-quality feed resources are a key constraining factor in livestock production tha...
This paper reports findings from a qualitative study undertaken in Tanzania and Kenya to examine wom...
Rural household economies dependent on rain-fed agriculture are increasingly turning to irrigation t...
Non-PRIFPRI1; GAAP; CRP4; CRP2; G Cross-cutting gender themeA4NH; EPTD; PHND; PIMCGIAR Research Prog...
Drawing on qualitative data from Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania, this paper develops a framework for ...
This Working Paper presents methodological and substantive findings of gender-differentiated quantit...
Given persistent gender inequalities that influence how the benefits of technologies are distributed...
This paper complements the gender and technology adoption literature by shifting attention to what h...
Small-scale irrigation is expanding rapidly in parts of the world, especially sub-Saharan Africa, of...
As part of their irrigation strategy, the government and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Ma...
The factors that hinder farm intensification process among smallholders in Kenya are many and varied...
This paper adopts a feminist approach to analyse how processes of scaling up of technologies to prom...
In sub-Saharan countries, male farmers are frequently seen as producers of cash crops and marketable...
The factors that hinder farm intensification process among smallholders in Kenya are many and varied...
Inadequate and poor-quality feed resources are a key constraining factor in livestock production tha...
This paper reports findings from a qualitative study undertaken in Tanzania and Kenya to examine wom...
Rural household economies dependent on rain-fed agriculture are increasingly turning to irrigation t...
Non-PRIFPRI1; GAAP; CRP4; CRP2; G Cross-cutting gender themeA4NH; EPTD; PHND; PIMCGIAR Research Prog...
Drawing on qualitative data from Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania, this paper develops a framework for ...
This Working Paper presents methodological and substantive findings of gender-differentiated quantit...
Given persistent gender inequalities that influence how the benefits of technologies are distributed...
This paper complements the gender and technology adoption literature by shifting attention to what h...
Small-scale irrigation is expanding rapidly in parts of the world, especially sub-Saharan Africa, of...
As part of their irrigation strategy, the government and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Ma...
The factors that hinder farm intensification process among smallholders in Kenya are many and varied...
This paper adopts a feminist approach to analyse how processes of scaling up of technologies to prom...
In sub-Saharan countries, male farmers are frequently seen as producers of cash crops and marketable...
The factors that hinder farm intensification process among smallholders in Kenya are many and varied...
Inadequate and poor-quality feed resources are a key constraining factor in livestock production tha...