The Role of Women in Pest Management Decision Making in Eastern Uganda
Author(s) -
M. Erbaugh,
Joseph Donnermeyer,
M. Amujal,
Samuel Kyamanywa
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of international agricultural and extension education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2831-5960
pISSN - 1077-0755
DOI - 10.5191/jiaee.2003.10309
Subject(s) - integrated pest management , agriculture , production (economics) , pest analysis , scale (ratio) , business , agricultural science , crop management , perception , environmental resource management , marketing , geography , psychology , economics , agronomy , biology , cartography , archaeology , neuroscience , macroeconomics
Gender can influence knowledge acquisition and on-farm decision making and must be thoroughly understood if agricultural research and extension programs are to design appropriate technologies for small-scale farming systems. In order to improve IPM program design and delivery, two hundred farmers (52% women, 48% men) from Eastern Uganda were surveyed in 1999, to explore perceptual and knowledge differences between men and women about crop production and pest management. The results indicate that women do play an important role in agricultural production and pest management; however, there is no indication that women play a predominant role in either. Pest management decisions appear to be made by the household head, whether that person is a male or female. Women have greater knowledge of dimensional attributes of IPM than men, particularly awareness of potential harmful effects of synthetic pesticides. Thus targeting women may expedite adoption of IPM.
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