Women in agriculture: Four myths
Despite the emerging global movement for reliable
indicators, well-intentioned but statistically unfounded stylized facts
on women, agriculture, and the environment continue to circulate. This
paper inspects four pervasive gender myths: 1) Women account for 70% of
the world's poor; 2) Women produce 60–80% of the world's food; 3) Women
own 1% of the world's land; and 4) Women are better stewards of the
environment. These claims are myths. Like all myths,
they embody an important truth, that women control fewer
resources than those required to fulfill their responsibilities to
ensure food and nutrition security.
However, none of these myths are based on sound empirical evidence.
To develop
effective policies to promote food security, it is necessary to have
appropriate data on women's and men's roles in food production and
natural resource management and the gendered constraints that they face.
By evaluating the data and assumptions behind these myths, we
contribute to both the academic and policy conversations on gender and rural development,
making the case for collecting and using better data to capture the
variation—over space and time—in the roles and status of women.
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