Gender Mainstreaming in Agricultural Supply Chains Can Accelerate Good Growth

January 29, 2020

What Works and For Whom?

Even though the need to minimize adverse social and environmental effects from supply chain activities is globally recognized, gender equality is still inconsistently prioritized, gender compliance challenging and consensus on its meaning, still elusive. But women play an important and valuable, though often invisible, role in agriculture. A reality that is not only unjust -women’s input and contribution to agriculture as well as the burdens they bear are not matched by an equal share of resources or influence in the sector-, but also costs individuals, households, and commodity supply chains.

As part of the Good Growth Partnership's mission to place sustainability at the heart of commodity supply chains, we are committed to long-term knowledge sharing, including the development of several Knowledge Products intended to enable exchange and lessons learned from the ground up.

The Knowledge Product presented below, developed under the Partnership’s Adaptive Management & Learning project, seeks to underline and stress the added value of using a gender lens in the design and implementation of activities within agricultural supply chains, and reflects on current trends in gender mainstreaming, opportunities to accelerate action, and critical lessons-learned from initiatives that have already been implemented.

Presenting a clear business case for gender equality and women’s empowerment within agricultural supply chains, it will prove a useful guidance on gender mainstreaming to stakeholders involved in commodity-related projects.

 

 

Do you want to learn more about gender mainstreaming?

Have a look at the edited highlights of the Women’s Speak Their Truth gender roundtable, a women-led discussion panel focused on women underrepresentation in agricultural trade that took place at the Good Growth Conference in May 2019 in Lima and the Peruvian Amazon.

The Roundtable was composed of the following industry leaders: Rini Indrayanti, SPOI Platform Manager of UNDP Indonesia; Jessica Donovan, Liberia Country director of Conservation International; Sandra Andraka, Fisheries Platform Coordinator at UNDP Costa Rica; Karin Kreider, Executive Director of ISEAL Alliance; Mónica Andrade, Environment Officer at UNDP Ecuador; Maike Moellers, Head of Programme of GiZ; Leisa Perch, International Gender and Environment Specialist at UN Women Caribbean; and Lise Melvin, Senior Programme Advisor of UNDP Green Commodities Programme and Good Growth Conference Lead.