myths and realities about men, women and forest use

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THINKING beyond the canopy Myths and realities about men, women and forest use: A global comparative study Terry Sunderland, Ramadhani Achdiawan, Arild Angelsen, Ronnie Babigumira, Amy Ickowitz, Fiona Paumgarten, Victoria Reyes-García, Gerald Shively CIFOR Annual General Meeting 3 rd October 2012

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There are several commonly held views on how men and women use forests – these views are often based on case studies. But examining global data gathered during the Poverty Environment Network project has come up with some different interpretations, as shown in this presentation. This presentation was given during CIFOR’s Annual Meeting 2012, which was held on 1–5 October at the headquarters in Bogor, Indonesia.

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Page 1: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Myths and realities about men,women and forest use:

A global comparative study

Terry Sunderland, Ramadhani Achdiawan, Arild Angelsen, Ronnie Babigumira,Amy Ickowitz, Fiona Paumgarten, Victoria Reyes-García, Gerald Shively

CIFOR Annual General Meeting3rd October 2012

Page 2: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Introduction Many of the claims often

made in the literature ongender and forest productsare based on case studies

However, it is unclear howgeneralizable they actuallyare

We investigated whetherseveral commonly held viewson gender and forest use aresupported by the global PENdata using descriptive andregression analysis

Page 3: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Is the harvesting of forest products mainlyundertaken by women?

Share of income from unprocessed forest products by region and gender

Page 4: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Is the harvesting of forest productsmainly undertaken by women?

Our data do not supportthis claim

For unprocessedproducts, this claim onlyholds in Sub-SaharanAfrica

For processed products, itdoes not hold in anygeographical location

Page 5: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Do women collect primarily forsubsistence and men for sale?

Page 6: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Do women collect for primarily forsubsistence and men for sale?

• Both women and mencollect predominantly forsubsistence use, but …

• Men´s sale share ishigher than women´s

• However, in Sub-Saharan Africa, theshare is almost equal

Page 7: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Do women collect a greater share of forestproducts from lands under common property

tenure regimes than men?

Page 8: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Do women collect a greater share of forestproducts from lands under commonproperty tenure regimes than men?

The vast majority of products forboth genders is collected understate property tenure regimes

In the global sample, theproportion collected by men andwomen from common property isabout the same

The conventional claim holds forLatin America and Asia, but not forAfrica

Page 9: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Summary of PEN gender findings

There is large regional variation in both the shares offorest products collected by women

Even after controlling for most of the factors discussed inthe literature as well as differences in level of marketintegration, women in Africa collect a much larger shareof forest products than women in Asia and Latin America

Many of the claims that originate from the gender andforest literature do not hold using the PEN global datasample

Men play a much more important and diverse role in thecontribution of forest products to rural livelihoods than isoften reported

Page 10: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Conclusions/Reflections

Deeper understanding of gendered patterns of incomegeneration are important for designing policies aimed atimproving household welfare in general, but especiallythose aimed at improving the livelihoods of women

Culture is important! Interesting methodological issue: what we can learn from

case studies vs. global data This kind of study helps us to see overall patterns, but.. To understand the stories behind the patterns, case

studies can be useful, but not as stand-alone referencepoints

Page 11: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

Look out for…

Special Issue of WorldDevelopment including all of thePEN-related research findings

PENwebsite:http://www.cifor.org/pen/

Page 12: Myths and realities about men, women and forest use

THINKING beyond the canopy

http://www.cifor.org