Journal article
Gender, Agrobiodiversity, and Climate Change: A Study of Adaptation Practices in the Nepal Himalayas
B Bhattarai, R Beilin, R Ford
World Development | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2015
Abstract
Gender is seminal to agrobiodiversity management, and inequities are likely to be exacerbated under a changing climate. Using in-depth interviews with farmers and officials from government and non-government organizations in Nepal, we explore how gender relations are influenced by wider socio-economic changes, and how alterations in gender relations shape responses to climate change. Combining feminist political ecology and critical social-ecological systems thinking, we analyze how gender and adaptation interact as households abandon certain crops, adopt high-yielding varieties and shift to cash crops. We argue that the prevailing development paradigm reinforces inequitable gender structure..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors thank the people who took part in this research for sharing their views and experiences. The first author is grateful to the University of Melbourne, Australia for funding this research. The authors recognize and appreciate the two anonymous reviewers whose comments have improved the quality of this article. We appreciate Barbara Pini for her useful comments on the earlier draft of this article. We also acknowledge Susan Anders for her very helpful copyediting and Chandra Jayasuriya for her help in map.