TY - JOUR
T1 - Female farmers’ struggles and responses to COVID-19 in Ghana
AU - Yaro, Joseph Awetori
AU - Sheburah Essien, Rosina
AU - Ablo, Austin Dziwornu
AU - Siakwah, Pius
AU - Zaami, Mariama
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The African Specialty Group of the American Association of Geographers.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The COVID-19 lockdown measures exacerbated the struggles of societies with existing inequalities. Given that women are generally the most vulnerable in times of pandemics and associated economic downturns, the study seeks to understand the struggles that female farmers experienced during the COVID-19 crisis and their survival responses and livelihood enhancement. To do this, we organized six women’s focus group discussions and interviewed 145 women farmers in communities within Builsa South and Ada (in Ghana) where farming is one of the major occupations for women. The findings reveal that the pandemic severely disrupted women’s access to farm inputs, markets, and farming activities amidst the absence of COVID-19 relief funds. Consequently, female farmers had to adopt multiple alternative livelihood strategies to meet their basic needs. But, the nature of the adaptation strategy adopted depended on the intersections of gender, household characteristics and remittance flows. Female farmers from migrant households with larger household sizes temporarily migrated as an alternative livelihood strategy compared to those from non-migrant households and with smaller family sizes. This distributional consequence of COVID-19 is important for government agencies to carefully consider when forming future response policies to pandemics in general and the rural agricultural sector specifically since it has implications for food security.
AB - The COVID-19 lockdown measures exacerbated the struggles of societies with existing inequalities. Given that women are generally the most vulnerable in times of pandemics and associated economic downturns, the study seeks to understand the struggles that female farmers experienced during the COVID-19 crisis and their survival responses and livelihood enhancement. To do this, we organized six women’s focus group discussions and interviewed 145 women farmers in communities within Builsa South and Ada (in Ghana) where farming is one of the major occupations for women. The findings reveal that the pandemic severely disrupted women’s access to farm inputs, markets, and farming activities amidst the absence of COVID-19 relief funds. Consequently, female farmers had to adopt multiple alternative livelihood strategies to meet their basic needs. But, the nature of the adaptation strategy adopted depended on the intersections of gender, household characteristics and remittance flows. Female farmers from migrant households with larger household sizes temporarily migrated as an alternative livelihood strategy compared to those from non-migrant households and with smaller family sizes. This distributional consequence of COVID-19 is important for government agencies to carefully consider when forming future response policies to pandemics in general and the rural agricultural sector specifically since it has implications for food security.
KW - Adaptation
KW - COVID-19
KW - female farmers
KW - Gender and intersectionality
KW - Ghana
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85196776732&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/19376812.2024.2370865
DO - 10.1080/19376812.2024.2370865
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85196776732
SN - 1937-6812
JO - African Geographical Review
JF - African Geographical Review
ER -