谈水:阿根廷门多萨农业推广小组中性别、信任和专业知识的相互作用

F. S. Riera, C. Hunecke, Alejandro Juan Gennari
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摘要

利益相关者的适应是克服全球气候模式变化的关键战略。但这仍然有赖于信息向最终用户流动的速度和有效性。研究表明,在信息传播的几个阶段,信息的流失和向同行学习比推广服务所传播的知识更为重要。妇女的参与和贡献既是支持性的,也是战略性的,这取决于网络内的一致程度和信任变量的相互作用。在干旱的安第斯山脉,农业处于中心地位,并依赖于影响市场前景、灌溉方式和利益相关者行为的水资源管理和宏观经济条件。数据是利用阿根廷门多萨省迪亚曼特河和阿图埃尔河流域用水户组织能力建设项目的平台收集的。社会网络分析(SNA)通过识别水管理系统中的群体结构、紧密联系和瓶颈,有助于揭示信息流的基石。首先,我们评估了原有关系和五个子主题网络的特征(密度、中心性、平均最短路径和程度)。其次,我们将仅包含已有链接的网络与讲座期间形成的网络进行了比较。研究结果强调了应对气候变化影响的适应性做法,对阿根廷水利和农业推广小组中性别动态、信任、专业知识认可和讨论模式之间错综复杂的相互作用提供了宝贵的见解。这些见解凸显了在不断发展的社会背景下,促进性别平等、解决专业知识认可方面的偏见以及利用信任进行有意义的知识交流的持续必要性。它还揭示了阿根廷在性别平等方面的表现与南美洲或全球北方类似生产设置的一致性,强调了在促进包容性和公平参与方面所面临的挑战和机遇的普遍性。我们的研究结果表明,两河流域内的每个群体都有许多已有的联系,新来者往往较难进入,因此平均路径较短。因此,信息传播速度更快。信任是明智话题的基本促进因素,也是沟通的催化剂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Talking water: interplay of gender, trust and expertise in agricultural extension groups in Mendoza, Argentina
Stakeholder adaptation is a critical strategy to overcome changing climate patterns worldwide. Still it relies on the speed and effectiveness of information flow to end-users. Research shows that the loss of information in several stages of its spread and learning from peers is more important than the knowledge circulated by extension services. Women’s participation and contribution are supportive and strategic, depending on the level of agreement and the interplay of trust variables within the network. In the arid Andes, agriculture is central and dependent on water management and macroeconomic conditions that shape market prospects, irrigation practices, and stakeholder behavior. Data were collected using the platform of a capacity-building program for organisations of water users in the Diamante and Atuel River basins in Mendoza, Argentina. Social Network Analysis (SNA) contributes to unveiling the cornerstones of information flow by identifying group structures, strong bonds, and bottlenecks in water management systems. In the first step, we evaluated the characteristics (density, centrality, average shortest path, and degree) of the pre-existing relationships and five sub-topic networks. Second, we compare networks containing pre-existing links only with those formed during the lecture. Emphasizing adaptation practices to cope with climate change impacts, the results provide valuable insights into the intricate interplay of gender dynamics, trust, expertise recognition, and discussion patterns within water and agricultural extension groups in Argentina. These insights highlight the ongoing need to promote gender equity, address biases in expertise recognition, and leverage trust for meaningful knowledge exchanges within evolving social contexts. It also reveals the alignment of Argentina's gender performance with similar production setups in Southern America or the Global North, highlighting the universality of challenges and opportunities in fostering inclusive and equitable participation. Our findings indicate that each group within the two river basins exhibits numerous pre-existing links and tends to be less accessible to newcomers, resulting in a shorter average path. Thus, information can spread faster. Trust is an underlying facilitator for sensible topics and a catalyzer for communication.
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