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    “Dear brother farmer”: Gender, agriculture and digital extension in rural Tunisia during the COVID-19 pandemic

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    Journal Article (688.9Kb)
    Authors
    Ragetlie, Rosalind
    Najjar, Dina
    Ouesalti, Dorsaf
    Date Issued
    2022-03
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Rosalind Ragetlie, Dina Najjar, Dorsaf Ouesalti. (31/3/2022). “Dear brother farmer”: Gender, agriculture and digital extension in rural Tunisia during the COVID-19 pandemic. Sustainability, 14 (7), pp. 1-22.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129629
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su14074162
    Abstract/Description
    Providing farmers with essential agricultural information and training in the era of COVID-19 has been a challenge that has prompted a renewed interest in digital extension services. There is a distinct gender gap, however, between men’s and women’s access to, use of, and ability to benefit from information and communication technologies (ICTs). The overall purpose of this research is to examine how digital extension can address gender inequality in rural areas in the context of the COVID-19 crisis by designing and evaluating the gendered impacts of a digital extension intervention delivered to 624 farmers (363 men and 261 women) (which included phone distribution, radio and SMS messages, and sharing of information prompts) in northern Tunisia. In order to assess the effectiveness of gender-responsive digital extension that targets husband and wife pairs, as opposed to only men, we employed logistic regression and descriptive statistics to analyze a sample of 242 farmers (141 women and 141 men). We find that phone ownership facilitated women’s access to their social network, as well as agricultural information and services, ultimately improving their participation in household decision making and agricultural production. We find that gender-responsive digital extension is effective for men and especially women in terms of usefulness, learning, and adoption. We identified education level and cooperative membership as important factors that determine the impact of digital extension services on farmers and demonstrate the positive impact of radio programming. We recommend strengthening phone access for women, targeting information (including through non-written ways) to both husbands and wives, using sharing prompts, and more rigorous extension for knowledge-intensive topics such as conservation agriculture and rural collectives.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Najjar, Dinahttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9156-7691
    CGIAR Action Areas
    Resilient Agrifood Systems
    CGIAR Initiatives
    Fragility to Resilience in Central and West Asia and North Africa
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Policies, Institutions, and Markets; Livestock
    AGROVOC Keywords
    agricultural extension; gender equality; women’s empowerment; digital extension; covid-19 pandemic; phone ownership
    Countries
    Tunisia
    Regions
    Northern Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas; Western University Ontario
    Investors/sponsors
    International Fund for Agricultural Development; CGIAR Trust Fund
    Collections
    • CGIAR Initiative on Fragility to Resilience in Central and West Asia and North Africa [162]

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