Publication | Closed Access
Capturing the Multiple and Shifting Identities of Farm Women in the Northeastern <scp>U</scp>nited <scp>S</scp>tates
56
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Women EmpowermentHistorical GeographyAgricultural EconomicsSocial SciencesRural SociologyFarming SystemGender StudiesAgricultural Resource ManagementPublic HealthLocal Food SystemsAgricultural ImpactRole IdentityAgroecological SystemsAgricultureAgricultural HistoryFeminist TheoryIdentity TheoryShifting IdentitiesSociologyFarm ManagementFarming SystemsAgricultural ManagementAnthropologyFarm Women
Abstract The identities of women on farms are shifting as more women enter farming and identify as farmers, as reflected by the 30 percent growth in women farmers in the U . S . census of agriculture (USDA 2009). This article draws from identity theory to develop a quantitative measure of the identities of farm women. The measure incorporates multiple roles farming women may perform and weights these roles by their salience to two farm identities, farm operator and farm partner. We use a sample of women on farms ( n = 810) in the northeastern U nited S tates to assess the measures of role identity in relation to reported decision‐making authority, farm tasks, and farm and individual characteristics. The findings provide a multidimensional view of farming women in the northeastern U nited S tates, a far more complex view than traditional survey research has previously captured. This research provides a measure that other researchers can use to assess the multiple and shifting identities of farming women in other sections of the U nited S tates.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1