Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
Book (stand-alone)Toolkit for value chain analysis and market development integrating climate resilience and gender responsiveness
Integrating agriculture in National Adaptation Plans (NAP-Ag) Programme
2019Also available in:
No results found.This toolkit aims to help countries in selecting and analysing value chains for opportunities to improve climate change resilience and reduce gender inequalities. It intends to provide policy makers, planners, project developers, technical advisors and implementers at local, regional or national level with good practices of climate-resilient and gender-responsive value chain development. It aims to act as a repository of relevant tools and methodologies for identifying relevant stakeholders and engaging with them to collect data and analyse it to design interventions. Climate change threatens agricultural value chains, and having a gender-responsive value chain approach is useful in analysing the climate risks, as it looks at stages during and beyond production, while using a more systemic approach to risk management. -
BookletUnderstanding women’s roles and trade potential along the soybean-to-poultry regional value chain: Case studies from Malawi and South Africa
Making the African Continental Free Trade Area work for women
2024Also available in:
No results found.THE AfCFTA has the potential to spur industrialization, boost RVCs and increase the participation and inclusion of women in intraregional trade and the economy. However, for regional soybean-to-poultry value chains, harnessing this potential is limited by several factors. While women do participate in these value chains, their participation is relatively fragmented with little activity towards scaling up production activities, building capabilities and reaching markets beyond borders.This qualitative study assesses gender dynamics along the soybean-to-poultry value chain in Malawi and South Africa, focusing particularly on women’s roles, barriers and trade potential. The paper combines in-depth interviews with desktop research and draws on the existing knowledge base at the Centre for Competition, Regulation and Economic Development (CCRED) on poultry Regional Value Chains, barriers to entry and obstacles to women’s participation in markets.The findings indicate that Soybean-to-poultry value chains are highly concentrated in the countries studied. Large producers dominate downstream production of poultry products and links to retail outlets as formal routes to market. The same producers are also integrated into poultry feed production and breeding for the supply of day-old chicks. Interviews conducted in Malawi and South Africa suggest little participation by women producers at more than one level of the value chain, which limits their ability to add value and contribute to value chain development.The various factors affecting the inclusion of women in regional soybean-to-poultry value chains point to the need for a package of measures (including mobilizing resources) to unlock the potential the AfCFTA presents for RVCs in the context of empowering women producers, processors and traders in the agrifood sector. -
Book (stand-alone)Gender-responsive value chain analysis in Albania
Case studies of Elbasan, Leskovik and Puka
2024Also available in:
No results found.Rural women are crucial contributors to Albania's agricultural sector and rural economy. They are actively involved in all stages of agrifood value chains as farmers, producers, processors, and consumers. Yet structural barriers limit their access to economic opportunities, thereby restricting also agrifood value chain sustainable and inclusive development. This publication employs FAO's gender-responsive value chain approach to analyze three case studies from Elbasan, Puka, and Leskovik. It highlights the opportunities for strengthening the role of women producers and processors in value chains and identifies key barriers that hinder women's full participation. Agribusiness incubators are highlighted in the report as innovative solutions designed to meet the specific needs of rural women and promote their economic empowerment. These incubators could play a crucial role in helping women overcome barriers in the agrifood sector, fostering their participation and unlocking new opportunities for the development of specific agrifood value chains.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
No results found.