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Women
work on a land reclamation project in
Niger
FAO/18875
/F. Paladini/R. Carucci
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The state of the world's
environment is vital for global food security.
It was once believed that natural
resources had an unlimited capacity to meet
humanity's needs. It is now more widely understood
that the environment is under threat and in need of
protection.
Since the early 1980s
considerable attention has been devoted to the
relationship between women and the environment,
and extensive efforts have been made to
identify the effects of the international
environmental crisis on women. Momentum was
gathered at the workshop of
non-governmental organizations,
which ran parallel to the first World
Conference on Women in Nairobi (1985), where it was
not only recognized that the themes of "women and
development" and the "environment" are interlinked
but also must be incorporated into policy
planning.
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In
Malawi, a rural woman uses a
fuelwood-efficient mud stove for
cooking
FAO/17765/
A. Conti
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These efforts culminated with the finalization
of the Women's Action Agenda
21, elaborated in the run-up of the 1992
UN Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCEDA), whereby the important relationship
between women and the environment was stressed.
As the world's food producers,
women and men have a stake in
the preservation of the
environment and in
environmentally sustainable development.
Land and water resources
form the basis of all farming systems, and their
preservation is crucial to sustained and improved
food production.Water
is
present at many levels in the
life of rural women: they collect water
and manage its use in the household; they farm
irrigated and rain-fed crops; they know where the
water can be found, how to store it, when it is
scarce and whether it is safe for their family's
use.
The same is true with
land. Women farmers tend to use and
perfect traditional cropping methods developed over
time to protect precious natural resources. This
makes them key players in the conservation of soil
fertility.
Women employ methods such as fallowing (leaving
fields uncultivated for at least a season), crop
rotation (planting a field with different
successive crops), intercropping (planting several
different crops in a field at one time), mulching
(spreading organic material on the soil around
plants to avoid water evaporation) and a variety of
techniques that promote soil conservation,
fertility and enrichment. Planners are now
recognizing the value of learning
from women's local knowledge to protect and
sustain the environment.
But poverty is a leading cause of environmental
degradation in the developing world. Women farmers
trying to eke out an existence on marginal lands,
with little education and no access to agricultural
resources, are often driven to adapting less
labour-intensive crops and practices that may harm
the environment. Soil erosion, polluted water and
declining yields
result.
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Members
of a village committee in Madagascar
discuss communal efforts to protect a
maize field
FAO/17418
/H. Wagner
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Furthermore, as women rarely
own land they cultivate there is little
incentive for them to make environmentally sound
decisions, while their lack of access to credit
hampers them from buying technologies and inputs
that would be less damaging to natural resources.
These negative factors set up a cycle of declining
productivity, increasing environmental degradation
and food insecurity for the future.
Men and women need to be
alerted to the threats that environmental
degradation pose to food security. Women
in particular, need to be informed about
alternative methods of cooking, farming, heating
and waste disposal. Gender-sensitive planning in
training and technology development would not only
improve production today, but it would also ensure
the protection of the environment for tomorrow.
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