Could
paying greater attention to gender roles help save the environment? Ever more
environmental groups believe it can. Some examples from practice - like
reforestation in Malawi - indicate this is indeed the case.
Deutsche Welle, 7 April 2015
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Collecting firewood is typically a woman's task in Malawi (Photo: Seline Meijer) |
When local
farmers in Malawi plant trees, a separation of labor is clear: While the farmer
plants the small seedlings, his wife takes care of older trees, sweeps away old
leaves from the ground, collects firewood for cooking and harvests the fruit.
Gender
obviously plays a huge role in life - and also for conservation. Scientists and
environmental organizations are now starting to paying attention to exactly
what makes up these differences.
What's
emerging is not only important for conservation - it's also a bit surprising.
Gender
matters
Conservation
International recently even created a job position dedicated to looking at
gender aspects in conservation. Kame Westerman, advisor for gender and
conservation, is convinced that gender is key - especially in conservation
projects that take place on a grassroots, community level.
"Men
and women use natural resources differently," Westerman told DW.
"That's due to roles and responsibilities, and the different things that
men and women do in their lives."
The main
issue: Although women in local communities do take over crucial tasks relating
to conservation, they are easily overlooked in the decision-making process,
Westerman says.
In many
communities women might not traditionally be included in the decision-making
elite of a community - yet it's usually these leaders that outside
environmental organizations and researchers first address.
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Trees as far as the eye can see - a successfully reforested site in northern Malawi |
Failure is
easy
Ignoring
women or not considering gender roles is the easiest way to let a project run
to ruin, Westerman thinks.
By way of
example, she refers to a conservation organization that tried to reduce
deforestation in a community where men were in charge of harvesting trees. The
conservationists tried to find another source of income for men to stop the
deforestation, so men were taught how to farm and harvest vanilla instead.
But it
didn't work out - after several bad harvests, the reason became clear:
Traditionally in this community, women had been in charge of small-scale
agriculture. But they'd never been asked, nor trained on vanilla cultivation.
So the
women likely ended up with a double burden of work. As the men sat around doing
nothing, women deliberately plucked off vanilla flowers to prevent pollination,
in order to reduce their workload.
To avoid
pitfalls like these, large conservation organizations ranging from IUCN, the
Nature Conservancy, and Conservation International to WWF have all started
issuing guidelines on how to deal with gender roles in conservation.
Digging
deep brings success
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Meijer conducted extensive fieldwork in Malawi |
Seline
Meijer, a postdoctoral researcher at University College Dublin, based her most
recent research project in a gender approach. The research, which was carried
out in partnership with the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) looked at if, how
and why local farmers plant new trees in Malawi. Deforestation is a major
problem in Malawi: 30 percent of its forests have disappeared in the last 10
years.
"It
gives you a better understanding of what the situation is like on the
ground," Meijer told DW. "There is a big difference in gender roles,
and the benefits that people get from projects," she added.
In Malawi,
tree-planting typically would fall to men. But when Meijer looked at gender
roles and the impact women have, she was surprised to find that in the south of
the country, more trees are being planted than in the north - due to different
gender dynamics there.
In the
north, households are traditionally led by men, and the decision on whether to
plant trees is up to them. However, in the south women often head the household
and family structures are traditionally matrilineal.
Even though
the actual physical task of planting trees is carried out by men as in the
north, the decision to plant trees is made differently in the south: It's
either up to the women alone; or women and men make the decision together. In
the end, this results in more trees being planted.
In this
case, women can have a concrete impact on reforestation. This research finding
was recently published in the Journal of Gender, Agriculture and Food Security.
It will for example be helpful when setting up large-scale reforestation
projects in Malawi.
Good for
nature - and women
Thinking
about gender when implementing conservation projects is not only beneficial for
the environment, said Westerman - it also protects the women. "Each
project will impact men and women differently," she pointed out.
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Including a female-dominated discussion round on tree-planting could increase the project's chances for success |
So how
could a gender-sensitive project look? The first step, according to Westerman,
is to understand gender dynamics - to understand whom is tasked with what, and
how the community makes decisions.
To enable
women participation in a project, it might also be necessary to organize
childcare, provide additional education to women, or run workshops for men and
women separately. "These are already small things we can do to help women
participate," Westerman said.
Men still
vital
"Sometimes
when programs talk about gender, it almost becomes synonymous with 'women,'
Meijer said. But it's crucial both genders continue to play a role, she added.
Westerman
agrees, as men are important advocates: "At the end of the day, in many of
these traditional cultures, unless men are on board, [the project] really won't
go anywhere."
When being
asked whether women would be better conservationists than men, if given more
power, Westerman laughed out loud. She responded: "Women and men both have
the potential to be amazing conservationists - our job is to ensure that both
have the ability to be the best conservationists possible."
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