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Policy briefBridging the gender gap in the agriculture and rural sector of Ghana: Implications for policy and programming
Policy brief for Ghana
2025Also available in:
No results found.FAO’s 2024 gender assessment of Ghana’s agriculture and rural development sector reveals persistent gender disparities despite national commitments to equality. Key findings show that sector programs have yet to align with global gender integration frameworks. Gender units in relevant ministries lack adequate resources, particularly at decentralized levels.Female-headed households face higher food insecurity, and women’s limited access to finance restricts their participation in high-value segments of crop, livestock, and fisheries value chains. Social norms further constrain women’s roles, especially in fisheries. Although legal protections for women’s land rights exist, customary systems hinder ownership and decision-making. Women also face limited access to extension services due to workload and social norms.The report calls for targeted policy and programmatic actions by government agencies, development partners, and civil society to close gender gaps in agrifood systems and enhance women’s economic empowerment. -
DocumentThe climate implications of agricultural policy reform 1997
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No results found.This paper discusses the role of the agriculture sector as a source and a sink of emissions both globally and in OECD countries, summarises recent trends in agricultural policies in OECD countries and discusses the relationships between agricultural practices and emissions and removals of greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4 and N2O). For each agricultural practice which is a source or sink of GHGs the implications of recent agricultural policy measures are discussed. Finally, stressing certain caveats an d areas where further information is needed, initial conclusions are made as to the impacts of recent agricultural policy reforms on net emissions of GHGs. The analysis of this paper is on the effects of agricultural policy reform measures at the regional /national level. Changes in agricultural production practices as a result of policy reforms may reduce emissions from a particular country or region particularly if the principal impact of these reforms is to reduce levels of production. Howeve r these benefits may be offset by increased production and emissions in other countries. Ultimately, because climate change impacts are not influenced by the location of GHG emissions there is a need for the impacts of OECD agricultural policy reforms to be assessed at the global scale. However, because information on the national impacts on GHGs of agricultural policy reforms is relatively limited and only now being developed, information with which to estimate global effects is even more limit ed. Incorporating this type of information into global models which evaluate the impacts of policy reforms on agricultural production patterns may be a first step towards providing some information on the potential global effects of these reforms. -
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