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Welcome to the March edition of the FTA newsletter series. This month, in celebration of International Women’s Day (IWD), we put a strong focus on FTA’s gender research and gender integration work. The theme of IWD, “Time is Now: Rural and urban activists transforming women’s lives”, foregrounds the many actors who mobilize diverse strategies to catalyze change for gender equality.
FTA’s research aims at enabling transformative change to enhance the wellbeing of women as well as men, young and old, who inhabit and manage forest and agroforest landscapes. This requires a focus on gender as a research area of its own, as well as mainstreaming gender throughout FTA’s research portfolio.
Social transformation requires the respective roles and contributions of different societal actors to be properly understood, recognized and rewarded. FTA scientists and partners use a range of methods to inform, and raise awareness of, decision makers at national and international scales on the perspectives that local women and men express throughout the research process.
Rural women, younger generations, and civil society more broadly can be change makers. They need to be supported, through capacity building and financial support, to engage with one another and other actors, and to make themselves heard and understood. We all — researchers, governments, and private sector actors included — have an active role to play in supporting transformative change in women’s lives.
Read on to see how FTA’s research on gender equality and social inclusion contributes to this goal.
Vincent Gitz, FTA Director, and Marlène Elias, FTA Gender Research Coordinator |
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Thoughts on gender
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To mark International Women’s Day, FTA Gender Research Coordinator Marlène Elias sat down with Cécile Ndjebet, president of the African Women’s Network for Community Management of Forests (REFACOF), to discuss the network’s successes and challenges in securing women’s tenure rights to land and forests, and the role of FTA research in supporting transformative change for its members, their communities, and their environments.
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News
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The forestry and agroforestry sector has much to contribute to addressing inequalities between women and men, and empowering disadvantaged women and men in ways that contribute to sustainable rural landscapes. FTA recently launched a new webpage summing up how it embeds gender research within each of its five research areas. The page also features a learning module comprising information, case studies and resources on key areas of FTA’s gender research for students, academics, practitioners, policy makers and others who work on natural resource management, gender, and the gender-agro/forest nexus.
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A new compilation of work showcases knowledge products and engagement activities carried out by the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) as part of FTA, highlighting key achievements thanks to the support of UK aid’s Knowledge for Forestry (Knowfor) program. The work furthers gender integration and gender-responsive research by deepening conceptual and methodological capabilities to undertake nuanced and relevant gender analyses, and by synthesizing and disseminating current gender research.
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Amid many challenges, women in Kenya are taking control of their farms, with impressive results – using a farming technique that is helping to alleviate food shortages. Following a previous article on the topic, women farmers have achieved stark differences in yields through simple planting basins, a water-conservation technology, with preliminary results showing that the size of the basins and their combination with other practices, such as applying manure and mulching, determine their impact on maize production under different conditions.
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Men and women differ in their preferences when it comes to REDD+ benefits, with men preferring cash incentives and women leaning toward non-cash benefits, according to a team of researchers that conducted in-depth intra-household interviews in Tanzania, Indonesia and Peru as part of a larger project on REDD+ and tenure. The researchers also found a correlation between increased women’s participation and more equitable distribution of benefits.
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Women’s involvement in the traditionally male-dominated charcoal industry is increasing across Zambia, from packaging charcoal to molding kilns, and even felling and cutting trees. The increased involvement of women is attributed to heightened demand as well as a perceived increase in poverty in rural areas, with many women viewing charcoal production as a viable business opportunity with low entry barriers.
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Women in forest-dwelling communities in Latin America use a wide array of products from their farmland and forests in their daily tasks, but when it comes to tenure rights to those forests or participation in decisions about their management, women are often left on the sidelines. That leaves the women — especially rural and indigenous women — particularly vulnerable, according to studies from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Nicaragua and Mexico, which formed part of a recent Special Issue of the Women’s Studies International Forum.
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Banner photo by O. Girard/CIFOR. Thoughts on gender and news photos, from top, by: Marlene Elias; M. Edliadi/CIFOR; M. Edliadi/CIFOR; A. Mamo/ICRAF; N. Mtimgwa/CIFOR; M. Edliadi/CIFOR; J. Baptist Wandera/CIFOR; J. Carlos Huayllapuma/CIFOR.
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