In poor countries the agricultural sector is essential to growth, poverty reduction, and food security. In Sub- Saharan Africa, the agricultural sector employs 65 percent of the labor force and generates 32 per cent of GDP growth (Christian Friis Bach and all, 2008).More than half of rural employment in Sub- Saharan Africa consists of self-employed farmers, many of whom are women. Women generally own less land and the land they have is often of lower quality than the land owned by men. According to the International Development Research Centre, women in Africa only own 1 per cent of the land. Women have to contend with limited access to financial and technical resources. Women lack political influence. However the recent economic crisis tha...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Most cultures in Africa view women’s role as subordinate to that of men. The patriarchal nature of h...
In poor countries the agricultural sector is essential to growth, poverty reduction, and food securi...
Women are under-acknowledged participants in Africa’s agriculture and food sector, supplying a large...
Agriculture for Development, the 2008 World Development Report, showed that agriculture is a critica...
No Abstract. South African Journal of Clinical Nutrition Vol. 18(2) 2005: 150-15
Women occupy a crucial position in the agricultural sector because; they participate in different fo...
The agricultural sector in Africa is positioned to determine the outcomes of perhaps the most conseq...
The agricultural sector in Africa is positioned to determine the outcomes of perhaps the most conseq...
Across Africa, rural transformation is taking place, and agriculture remains a central driver of tha...
Across Africa, rural transformation is taking place, and agriculture remains a central driver of tha...
Most cultures in Africa view women's role as subordinate to that of men. The patriarchal nature of h...
"Gender norms are an important constraint to increasing agricultural productivity. Inequality in the...
"Gender norms are an important constraint to increasing agricultural productivity. Inequality in the...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Most cultures in Africa view women’s role as subordinate to that of men. The patriarchal nature of h...
In poor countries the agricultural sector is essential to growth, poverty reduction, and food securi...
Women are under-acknowledged participants in Africa’s agriculture and food sector, supplying a large...
Agriculture for Development, the 2008 World Development Report, showed that agriculture is a critica...
No Abstract. South African Journal of Clinical Nutrition Vol. 18(2) 2005: 150-15
Women occupy a crucial position in the agricultural sector because; they participate in different fo...
The agricultural sector in Africa is positioned to determine the outcomes of perhaps the most conseq...
The agricultural sector in Africa is positioned to determine the outcomes of perhaps the most conseq...
Across Africa, rural transformation is taking place, and agriculture remains a central driver of tha...
Across Africa, rural transformation is taking place, and agriculture remains a central driver of tha...
Most cultures in Africa view women's role as subordinate to that of men. The patriarchal nature of h...
"Gender norms are an important constraint to increasing agricultural productivity. Inequality in the...
"Gender norms are an important constraint to increasing agricultural productivity. Inequality in the...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Substantial gains have been made over the past 30 years in enhancing agricultural productivity in de...
Most cultures in Africa view women’s role as subordinate to that of men. The patriarchal nature of h...