Rangeland Women: Why Supporting Them Could Save Tunisia’s Degraded Ecosystems
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Dina Najjar. (14/10/2021). Rangeland Women: Why Supporting Them Could Save Tunisia’s Degraded Ecosystems. URL: https://www.icarda.org/media/blog/rangeland-women-why-supporting-them-could-save-tunisias-degraded-ecosystems
Abstract
Across the drylands, there is a widespread misconception surrounding rural women's involvement in rangelands.
Women's roles in livestock rearing, crop cultivation, and climate change adaptation, are either diminished or altogether invisible, perpetuating a loop of missed opportunities and a lack of institutional support. Tunisia is no exception.
ICARDA Gender Scientist Dina Najjar and Bipasha Baruah -who holds the Canada Research Chair in Global Women's Issues at the University of Western Ontario - debunk the myth that rangeland activities are primarily male-oriented and male performed in an upcoming paper.
Their study calls for emerging policies to reflect and integrate rangeland women's priorities and skills and facilitate their access to training and resources.
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Najjar, Dina https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9156-7691