Demand-led extension: a gender analysis of attendance and key crops
Date Issued
2020-08Date Online
2020-02Language
enType
Journal ArticleReview status
Peer ReviewISI journal
Accessibility
Open AccessUsage rights
CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Williams, F. E.; Taron, Avinandan. 2020. Demand-led extension: a gender analysis of attendance and key crops. Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension, 26(4):383-400. [doi: 10.1080/1389224X.2020.1726778]
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107438
Abstract/Description
Purpose: The need to increase women’s access to extension has been extensively discussed. This paper assesses women’s access to extension services through the Plantwise extension approach as a baseline for future comparison of women’s access through other extension approaches. It also assesses whether crops that men and women farmers seek plant health advice on are similar or not, and attempts to disperse assumptions that continue to be made about what crops women and men grow.
Approach: We analysed data from the Plantwise Online Management System for 13 countries using descriptive and inferential statistics.
Findings: We show that the Plantwise extension approach enables higher levels of women’s access than generally reported for agricultural extension, that the crops that women and men seek extension advice on is not gender dependent, and there are few clear distinctions between their crops of interest.
Practical implications: There is limited literature studying gender inclusiveness in different extension approaches. The findings add to the documentation of assessing women’s access to demand-driven extension.
Theoretical implications: Plantwise is a new extension approach which needs to be assessed from spatial and temporal perspectives to understand whether demand-driven extension enables increased women’s access over time.
Originality/value: Extension service provision is often based on assumptions about what crops are being grown. Small studies have challenged these assumptions, but this large dataset enables us to test these assumptions more thoroughly across 13 countries adding to the weight of evidence against the existence of women’s and men’s crops.
CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
Avinandan Taronhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6512-482X
AGROVOC Keywords
Countries
Bangladesh; Cambodia; Ghana; India; Kenya; Malawi; Myanmar; Nepal; Rwanda; Sri Lanka; Thailand; Vietnam; ZambiaOrganizations Affiliated to the Authors
International Water Management InstituteCollections
- IWMI Journal Articles [2546]
