Gender gaps in African agriculture worry stakeholders
Gender gaps in agriculture in
Africa are holding back progress towards ending hunger and must be urgently
addressed, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization's Director-General José
Graziano da Silva, has lamented at a joint event with the African Union (AU) on
the margins of the UN General Assembly.
"We need to better recognize
and harness the fundamental contribution of women to food security and nutrition.
For that, we must close persisting gender gaps in agriculture in Africa,"
he said.
He called for better
representation of women in governance mechanisms and decision-making processes,
as well as adequate and equal access to land, financial resources, social
protection programmes, services and opportunities for women in rural areas.
The findings and recommendations
of the AU-FAO study, The Regional Outlook on Gender and Agrifood Systems, were
presented at the event. The Outlook is based on an extensive review of existing
statistics, gender audits of 38 National Agricultural Investment Plans and
in-depth country gender assessments carried out in 40 countries.
The study's recommendations call
for a gender data revolution in the agrifood sector to inform sound policies
and programmes, and elevating the gender benchmarks in planning, monitoring and
accountability.
"We need to put in place
gender-targeted programmes that address women's specific vulnerabilities but
also their key role in household nutrition and resilience," Graziano da
Silva said.
"Evidence shows that when
women are empowered, farms are more productive, natural resources are better
managed, nutrition is improved, and livelihoods are more secure," he
added.
In some African countries, women
account for up to 60 percent of the labour force in family farming. They are
largely responsible for agricultural activities such as growing vegetables,
preserving harvests and raising small ruminants such as sheep and goats.
Women are also responsible for
family nutrition through the preparation of meals.
Closing productivity gaps could
increase food production and consumption by up to 10 percent and reduce poverty
by up to 13 percent.
If women have the same access to
skills, resources and opportunities as men, they can be powerful drivers in the
fight against hunger, malnutrition and poverty. Empowering women in
agriculture, value chains and trade will accelerate the achievement of the
Malabo Commitments and the Sustainable Development Goals.
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