Participation in Dairy Value Chains and Inter-Household Gender Relations in Tanzania

Marwa Yusuf
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Abstract

Tanzania has the third largest livestock population in Africa but it failed to use that potential such that most its population particularly women remained poor due to gender gap in the access and control of productive assets in livestock sector. This study intended to explore gender dynamics and power relations; and how they shaped the access and control of productive assets and benefits in the dairy value chains of men and women in the intensive and extensive livestock systems since past studies did not cover that part. This study used Net-Mapping methodology and ethnographic methods for identifying actors and/or institutions, their levels of influence, factors and benefits and gender issues in the men and women dairy value chains. The data were analysed by using Visualyzer 2.2 and Nvivo10 -Matrix coding query. Identified factors/productive assets for participation for men and women in each system were community norms and practices, education, membership in dairy farmers’ groups, social capital, decision on milk sale, land, decision on livestock health services, decision on livestock selling/ buying, price of milk, mode of payment and knowledge about livestock; and benefits were asset accumulation, getting food, income, paying for school expenses, meeting household expenses, manure, dowry payment and paying for medical bills. Traditions and customs shaped the gender imbalances such that men in both systems were found to have better access and more control on the factors and benefits of participating in the dairy value chains; consequently male-headed households had more access and control over the factors and benefits but this was common in the extensive livestock system where women were worse-off as compared to their counterparts in the intensive livestock system. It was observed that polygamy was prevalent in both systems but it was more common in the extensive system; thus it was found that the access and control of factors and benefits decreased as the number of wives increased in the households. Dairy value chains for men and women were created in each system; it was observed that women chains were smaller than men chains but men chain in intensive was larger than men chain in the extensive; and women chain in the intensive was far larger than women chain in the extensive system. it was hard for inputs to move from one part to another in the women chains.it was recommended that there should be special seats for women in local governments which were responsible for allocating resources such as land, commercial processors should pay through mobile phones to avoid late payment, government should make gender sensitive livestock policies, destocking to reduce pressure on the environment and NGOs, civil society and government should launch campaigns to educate communities about gender equity. This study did not cover market analysis (profit margins, concentration ratios etc.) separately for women and men dairy value chains; these were suggested areas for further research in the sector.
坦桑尼亚乳制品价值链参与和家庭间性别关系
坦桑尼亚拥有非洲第三大的牲畜种群,但它未能利用这一潜力,因此,由于在获取和控制畜牧部门生产性资产方面的性别差距,其大多数人口,特别是妇女仍然贫穷。本研究旨在探讨性别动态与权力关系;以及它们如何影响集约化和粗放式畜牧业系统中男性和女性乳制品价值链中生产性资产和收益的获取和控制,因为过去的研究没有涵盖这一部分。本研究使用网络测绘方法和民族志方法来确定行为者和/或机构、其影响程度、因素和利益以及男性和女性乳制品价值链中的性别问题。采用Visualyzer 2.2和Nvivo10 -Matrix编码查询对数据进行分析。确定的男女参与每个系统的因素/生产资产是社区规范和做法、教育、奶农团体的成员资格、社会资本、关于牛奶销售的决定、土地、关于牲畜保健服务的决定、关于牲畜买卖的决定、牛奶价格、支付方式和关于牲畜的知识;福利是资产积累,获得食物,收入,支付学费,支付家庭开支,肥料,嫁妆和支付医药费。传统和习俗塑造了性别失衡,因此发现两个体系中的男性对参与乳制品价值链的因素和利益有更好的机会和更多的控制;因此,男性户主的家庭对因素和利益有更多的机会和控制,但这在粗放型畜牧业系统中很常见,与集约型畜牧业系统中的妇女相比,妇女的情况更差。人们注意到,一夫多妻制在两种制度中都很普遍,但在广泛的制度中更为普遍;因此,随着家庭中妻子数量的增加,对因素和利益的获取和控制减少。在每个系统中都为男性和女性创建了乳制品价值链;结果表明:在集约化阶段,女性的链条比男性的链条小,而在粗放化阶段,男性的链条比男性的链条大;集约型体系中的女性链条远大于粗放型体系中的女性链条。在妇女链中,投入很难从一个部分转移到另一个部分。报告建议在负责分配土地等资源的地方政府中为妇女设立特别席位,商业加工商应该通过手机付款以避免逾期付款,政府应该制定对性别敏感的牲畜政策,减少库存以减轻对环境的压力,非政府组织、民间社会和政府应该发起运动,向社区宣传性别平等。本研究没有分别涵盖女性和男性乳制品价值链的市场分析(利润率、集中度等);这些是建议在该部门进一步研究的领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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