Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics

The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the gender and social disparities existing in the agricultural and rural sector in Caribbean economies. In this context, agricultural transformation as occasioned by the dismantling of preferential trading arrangements is analysed to identify the...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38823
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai-11362-38823
record_format dspace
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic AGRICULTURA
DESARROLLO AGRICOLA
GENERO
INVESTIGACION SOBRE EL GENERO
ECONOMIA REGIONAL
TRABAJADORES AGRICOLAS
AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
GENDER
GENDER RESEARCH
REGIONAL ECONOMICS
AGRICULTURAL WORKERS
spellingShingle AGRICULTURA
DESARROLLO AGRICOLA
GENERO
INVESTIGACION SOBRE EL GENERO
ECONOMIA REGIONAL
TRABAJADORES AGRICOLAS
AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
GENDER
GENDER RESEARCH
REGIONAL ECONOMICS
AGRICULTURAL WORKERS
Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
description The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the gender and social disparities existing in the agricultural and rural sector in Caribbean economies. In this context, agricultural transformation as occasioned by the dismantling of preferential trading arrangements is analysed to identify the most relevant gender discriminatory measures in the current agricultural development policy and programmes. The analysis seeks to provide the basis for enhancing understanding among policy makers, planners and rural development practitioners of the gender and social dimension involved in the formulation of agricultural policy and more specifically in relation to the new policy and institutional arrangements for agriculture in the region. The paper also provides insights regarding what changes should take place to create an enabling environment for more gender-based approaches to policy-making and strategic planning in agricultural development and trade in the Caribbean. The methodology centred on the review of secondary sources that provide references on the new challenges, opportunities and constraints faced by the agricultural sector, in particular small farmers, in the context of globalization and agriculture transformation. Much of the literature for this assignment was obtained from FAO Headquarters in Rome and the FAO Subregional Office in Barbados, as well as the OECS Secretariat in St. Lucia. In the process of the review exercise, due consideration was given to changes in agricultural production patterns, resources allocation and rural livelihoods. Efforts to examine the most relevant policy measures and mechanisms in-place in support to agricultural development in the region were constrained, in the main, by the absence of gender disaggregated data. Documentation as regards the situation of women and men in relation to agricultural labour, rural income and food security situation in regions were limited. The use of the internet served to bridge the communication gap between countries and institutions. The preliminary draft of the paper was presented and discussed at the FAO/ECLAC/UNIFEM regional workshop on mainstreaming gender analysis in agriculture and trade policies, for Caribbean countries, in November 2003. The second draft of the paper was informed by comments from the workshop and additional information acquired through field visits to Barbados, St. Kitts and St. Vincent in March 2004. The three day visits to each of these three countries entailed a review/appreciation of the resource, constraints and institutional capacities for gender mainstreaming within the agricultural sector at the national level. This included visits to some of the major agricultural projects and interviews with farmers (where feasible) in respect of their perspective of the current situation of the agricultural sector and the viability of their farm enterprises. As well, meetings were held with relevant/available officials within the respective ministries of agriculture to discern the gender consideration as regards agricultural policy and planning at the country level. The internet was invaluable to the task of sourcing supplementary information to satisfy the aim of the paper; in respect of the identification of concrete policy measures and actions to formulate and develop more gender/social-responsive agricultural development policies. The final revision, though thwart with resource and communication constraints, was ultimately completed in compliance with the structure and approach proposed in the terms of references for this FAO/ECLAC assignment.
author2 NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
author_facet NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
format Texto
title Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
title_short Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
title_full Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
title_fullStr Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics
title_sort agricultural transformation and gender considerations in caribbean economics
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38823
_version_ 1718438090596417536
spelling oai-11362-388232021-10-25T20:10:40Z Agricultural transformation and Gender considerations in Caribbean Economics NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe AGRICULTURA DESARROLLO AGRICOLA GENERO INVESTIGACION SOBRE EL GENERO ECONOMIA REGIONAL TRABAJADORES AGRICOLAS AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT GENDER GENDER RESEARCH REGIONAL ECONOMICS AGRICULTURAL WORKERS The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the gender and social disparities existing in the agricultural and rural sector in Caribbean economies. In this context, agricultural transformation as occasioned by the dismantling of preferential trading arrangements is analysed to identify the most relevant gender discriminatory measures in the current agricultural development policy and programmes. The analysis seeks to provide the basis for enhancing understanding among policy makers, planners and rural development practitioners of the gender and social dimension involved in the formulation of agricultural policy and more specifically in relation to the new policy and institutional arrangements for agriculture in the region. The paper also provides insights regarding what changes should take place to create an enabling environment for more gender-based approaches to policy-making and strategic planning in agricultural development and trade in the Caribbean. The methodology centred on the review of secondary sources that provide references on the new challenges, opportunities and constraints faced by the agricultural sector, in particular small farmers, in the context of globalization and agriculture transformation. Much of the literature for this assignment was obtained from FAO Headquarters in Rome and the FAO Subregional Office in Barbados, as well as the OECS Secretariat in St. Lucia. In the process of the review exercise, due consideration was given to changes in agricultural production patterns, resources allocation and rural livelihoods. Efforts to examine the most relevant policy measures and mechanisms in-place in support to agricultural development in the region were constrained, in the main, by the absence of gender disaggregated data. Documentation as regards the situation of women and men in relation to agricultural labour, rural income and food security situation in regions were limited. The use of the internet served to bridge the communication gap between countries and institutions. The preliminary draft of the paper was presented and discussed at the FAO/ECLAC/UNIFEM regional workshop on mainstreaming gender analysis in agriculture and trade policies, for Caribbean countries, in November 2003. The second draft of the paper was informed by comments from the workshop and additional information acquired through field visits to Barbados, St. Kitts and St. Vincent in March 2004. The three day visits to each of these three countries entailed a review/appreciation of the resource, constraints and institutional capacities for gender mainstreaming within the agricultural sector at the national level. This included visits to some of the major agricultural projects and interviews with farmers (where feasible) in respect of their perspective of the current situation of the agricultural sector and the viability of their farm enterprises. As well, meetings were held with relevant/available officials within the respective ministries of agriculture to discern the gender consideration as regards agricultural policy and planning at the country level. The internet was invaluable to the task of sourcing supplementary information to satisfy the aim of the paper; in respect of the identification of concrete policy measures and actions to formulate and develop more gender/social-responsive agricultural development policies. The final revision, though thwart with resource and communication constraints, was ultimately completed in compliance with the structure and approach proposed in the terms of references for this FAO/ECLAC assignment. 1. Introduction.--2. Overview of the Agricultural Sector.--3. Social and Gender Imbalances.--4. Impact of Agricultural Trade Policies and Strategies.--5. Institutional and Intellectual Gaps.--6. Integrating Gender into Agricultural Policy and Action.--7. Conclusions and Recommendations. 2015-08-11T13:25:57Z 2015-08-11T13:25:57Z 2005-12-30 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38823 LC/CAR/R.85 en .pdf application/pdf CARIBE CARIBBEAN REGION