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Pathways to achieving food security, sustainable peace and gender equality: Evidence from three FAO interventions
Author(s) -
Justino Patricia,
Hagerman Katharine,
Jackson Julius,
Joshi Indira,
Sisto Ilaria,
Bradley Asha
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
development policy review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.671
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1467-7679
pISSN - 0950-6764
DOI - 10.1111/dpr.12413
Subject(s) - collective action , food security , psychological intervention , livelihood , corporate governance , agency (philosophy) , political science , conceptual framework , agriculture , social protection , economic growth , economic system , public relations , sociology , economics , politics , social science , psychology , ecology , psychiatry , law , biology , finance
There is increasing recognition that livelihood security, sustainable peace, conflict prevention and gender equality are complementary goals requiring integrated policy approaches, yet there is limited evidence on the links between these key development pillars. Motivation This article uses three case studies to illustrate how specific policy interventions can address the differentiated priorities of men and women with relation to food security, building sustainable peace processes and achieving gender equality. Purpose The article illustrates how five pathways have operated and interacted in three selected FAO interventions, and discusses data, research and policy challenges that emerged from this analysis. Approach and methods A conceptual framework grounded on five pathways is used, including changes in (a) behaviour, agency and aspirations; (b) social norms about gender roles and equality; (c) institutions and governance; (d) agriculture and employment markets; and (e) social cohesion and inclusive collective action. Findings The institutions that emerge from complex processes of interaction between state and non‐state armed actors, other informal actors and different population groups shape how property rights, food distribution systems, employment programmes and social service provision support or fail to support the local populations. Policy implications More information is needed on local conflict dynamics. As such, better data collection is needed to support policy interventions.

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