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Book (stand-alone)Gender inequalities in Rural Employment in Ghana - an overview
Ghana country profile
2012Also available in:
No results found.Despite Ghana's great progress in poverty reduction, an important share of rural men and women in the country still lack decent work opportunities. The Northern part of the country and rural areas in general are of major concern. Rural women in particular face greater difficulties in transforming their labour into more productive employment activities and their paid work into higher and more secure incomes. Similarly, the young rural population faces barriers in joining the labour market and mig ration is often a livelihood strategy. Efforts to promote gender equity in labour markets and income generating activities, as well as to support decent employment initiatives in rural areas, are hampered by the lack of comprehensive information on the multiple dimensions of social and gender inequalities, particularly in rural areas. This country profile developed by the Gender, Equity and Rural Employment Division (ESW) of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) addresses the lack of statistics and contributes to a better understanding of the types and the degree of existing gender inequalities in rural settings. The profile serves as a policy support tool for integrating and monitoring gender equity and decent rural employment in agriculture, food security, and rural development policies and programs. -
Book (stand-alone)Gender inequalities in Rural Employment in Malawi - an overview
Malawi Country Profile - overview
2011Also available in:
No results found.This country profile aims to contribute to a better understanding of gender inequalities in rural settings in Malawi, and to serve as a policy support tool to better integrate gender equity and decent rural employment in agriculture and rural development policies and programmes. Malawi is a predominantly rural country with an agriculture-based economy. Rural areas in the country are characterized by poverty and a lack of decent work opportunities, the majority of which are in the agricultur e sector. Women are often more disadvantaged when it comes to decent work opportunities and face greater difficulty translating their labour into paid work and their paid work into higher and more secure incomes, which would ultimately lead to enhanced food security. Efforts are therefore needed to promote gender equity in policies and programmes, in order to support decent employment in rural areas. -
Book (stand-alone)Gender inequalities in Rural Employment in Ghana - policy and legislation
Ghana Country Profile
2012Also available in:
No results found.Poverty in Ghana continues to be extensive, particularly for farming households. Low agricultural productivity and the lack of decent work opportunities, along with a poorly educated workforce pose great challenges for poverty eradication. The lack of comprehensive policy formulation and legal mechanisms hamper efforts to promote social and gender equality in rural labor markets. Policies that take into account the multiple dimensions in which social and gender inequalities interact, partic ularly in rural areas, will support decent employment initiatives and income generating activities. The Ghana profile on policy and legislation developed by the Gender, Equity and Rural Employment Division (ESW) of the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations aims to improve the understanding of the available policy and legislation mechanisms that are relevant for addressing gender and social inequalities in rural labor markets.
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