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Gender issues in family poultry production systems in low-income food-deficit countries
45
Citations
10
References
2003
Year
EngineeringDevelopment EconomicsSustainable Food SystemAgricultural ExtensionAgricultural EconomicsLow-income Food-deficit CountriesNatural ResourcesFamily PoultryFarming SystemFood SystemsSustainable AgriculturePublic HealthGender IssuesFood PolicyEconomicsPublic PolicyFood SecurityAgricultureFood RegulationsIntensive Poultry ProductionPoultry FarmingFood ProductionPoultry Science
Abstract Despite efforts to develop intensive poultry production, family poultry (FP) is still very important in low-income, food-deficit countries (LIFDCs). In LIFDCs, the keeping of poultry by local communities has been practiced for many generations. FP is an appropriate system for supplying the fast-growing human population with high-quality protein. It can also provide additional income to the generally resource-poor small farmers, especially women. Although requiring low levels of inputs, FP contributes significantly to food security, poverty alleviation and ecologically sound management of natural resources. FP is also a source of employment for underprivileged groups and less-favored areas in LIFDCs. Developing schemes that aim to promote and improve the FP sub-sector in a way that is sustainable must not underestimate the roles and contributions of women. However, getting new information to the front line of production requires more gender-disaggregated data. This paper stresses the need to design, implement, monitor and evaluate FP development programs by taking into account socio-cultural, especially gender, issues.
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