| DC Field | Value | Language |
| dc.contributor.author | Hritika Rana, Hritika | - |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-11-27T07:20:36Z | - |
| dc.date.available | 2025-11-27T07:20:36Z | - |
| dc.date.issued | 2019-03-15 | - |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14301/566 | - |
| dc.description.abstract | Examining the nature of the feminization of agriculture, and factors influencing
the phenomenon in citrus producing pocket areas of Sindhuli district in Central Nepal,
the study unravels gender based social norms and practices prevalent in the
contemporary agrarian society. Given the debates and arguments presented by
feminization and women’s empowerment scholars, the study has been embedded within
a broader agricultural background by contextualizing agriculture in a multi-functional
transition model. The multi-functional agrarian transition has however been limited in its
scope within four dominant agricultural production domain, namely cereal, citrus,
livestock and vegetables.
The overall research design used to understand social change, mainly changes
brought about in gender relations as a result of citrus plantation, uses a transformatory
research design with mixed-method approach. The micro-level case analysis includes of
an in-depth study of the three phenomenon, namely agricultural transition, feminization
of agriculture, and women’s empowerment in agriculture. Using ethnography as a
research approach, this study has applied different tools including of participant
observation, key informant interviews, narrative interviews, and questionnaire survey to
collect data from the field. With multiple periods of ethnographic fieldwork, different
data collection tools have been used concurrently. Questionnaire survey has been used
to collect data on the labour force participation by sex to gather numerical and
measurable accounts of women’s involvement in agriculture. Decision-making as a
proxy for women’s empowerment also includes of survey data. A total of 140
households were purposively selected using cluster-sampling technique. In order to
gather more detailed qualitative information on feminization of agriculture and women’s
empowerment that supports meaning making of the survey data, twenty biographic
narrative interviews were conducted with women farmers using heterogeneous sampling
technique. Secondary source of information on membership detail of women and men in
citrus cooperative has also been used.
Feminization of agriculture has been explored by analyzing labour force
participation rate of male and female, task-based division of labour, and how different
tasks under each production domain have become gendered. Presenting the intra
household division of work in agriculture three categories of households based on labour
arrangement in rural farms were identified. Unlike few strictly defined work for man and
woman in cereal crop production, other agricultural work are culturally gender neutral. It
is within this flexibility of work, that this study has portrayed how varied degrees of
market orientation in a mixed-farming system changes household labour, exchange
labour and wage labour relationship. Labour as a resource presents a gendered pattern of
the value of labour, with men’s contribution of labour being valued differently than that
of women’s in each production domain of agriculture. Gender based-inequalities in
labour use can be interpreted as having the power to reinforce and intensify the existing
gender roles, with women being encouraged to participate in traditional work, while
mostly men being integrated into the new works in the labour market created by citrus.
In order to understand feminization beyond the rationale of male outmigration and male
non-agricultural employment, the study portrays different categories of feminization
based on women’s labour concentration in cash crop vis-à-vis other types of agricultural
crop/livestock with varying degree of market-orientation. The study shows multitude
conditions of feminization in one hand, and on the other presents situation whereby
feminization of one category may not necessarily result in feminization of another
category of agricultural production. It also highlights task-based feminization of work;
especially those considered as an extension of traditional agricultural work that did not
need much supervision nor did it require substantial instruction.
Emerging themes from narratives of women farmers’ lived-experiences has been
used to examine women’s empowerment in agriculture. First, the intra-household
decision-making regarding each production domain has been comprehended by
considering the value of each crop/livestock within a broader agricultural space in the
study site. Thus, gender hierarchy in decision-making of four domains of agricultural
production is further analyzed to understand women’s subordination in the citrus domain
although women mostly held decision-making positions in other domains of production.
Female to male ratio of decision-making provides a glimpse on how women are
positioned within the decision-making of cereal, vegetable, citrus and livestock
production. Finally, the study analyses other resources such as land, labour, income,
social networks and human mobility that are linked with production of these four
domains in a mixed-farming system. Each resource has been assessed to understand how
women have or have not been able to use or have control over these resources by
challenging the existing gender norms that subordinate women over men. Household
members’ everyday lifestyles regarding the changing opportunities in agriculture and
non-agriculture have been presented as influencing the current social arrangement that
shape men and women’s lives differently. Both feminization and empowerment is
understood as a social process, which is constantly in flux. | en_US |
| dc.publisher | KUSOA | en_US |
| dc.title | NEXUS BETWEEN AGRICULTURAL TRANSITION, FEMINIZATION OF AGRICULTURE, AND WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT IN NEPAL | en_US |
| local.school.name | KUSOA | en_US |
| local.school.department | Department of Development Studies | en_US |
| local.school.program | PhD in Development Studies | en_US |
| local.school.level | Ph.D. | en_US |
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