This presentation was given by Ranjitha Puskur (IRRI), as part of the Annual Scientific Conference hosted by the CGIAR Collaborative Platform for Gender Research. The event took place on 5-6 December 2017 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where the Platform is hosted (by KIT Royal Tropical Institute).
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-scientific-conference-capacity-development-workshop-cgiar-collaborative-platform-gender-research/), as part of the Annual Scientific Conference hosted by the CGIAR Collaborative Platform for Gender Research. The event took place on 5-6 December 2017 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where the Platform is hosted (by KIT Royal Tropical Institute).
Read more: http://gender.cgiar.org/gender_events/annual-scientific-conference-capacity-development-workshop-cgiar-collaborative-platform-gender-research/
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Understanding gendered rice varietal trait preferences: Case of stress tolerant rice in Odisha
1. Understanding Gendered Varietal Trait Preferences:
Case of Stress Tolerant Rice in Odisha
Ranjitha Puskur, Swati Nayak, Harold Valera, Eva Bacud, Joyce Luis and
Ruben Nunez
Presented at the CGIAR Gender Platform Annual Scientific Conference
5-6 Dec 2017, Amsterdam
2. Why understand gendered trait preferences?
• To inform gender-responsive breeding priorities and investment
decisions
• Sets of traits that women and men value and desire in the Rice
varieties they grow could be different
– Producers
– Consumers
– Other value chain actors
• We will not be developing separate varieties for men and women, but
varieties that include preferred traits of both women and men
• We cannot breed for the large number of diverse traits that women
and men prefer, but ensure the ‘must have’ traits for both are included
– And also ensure the not-so desirable traits which might affect them negatively are
managed (e.g., requiring high labour or costs etc)
3. Do men and women prefer different traits?
A very broad generalisation based on a review of literature (across all
crops, agro-ecologies and regions) says:
-overall men focus more on production and marketing related traits
-women on production and use (post harvest and food preparation)
related traits
However, when they face similar constraints (mostly production and agro-
ecological) they tended to mention similar preferences
Very few studies conducted and published focused on Asia (13%) and fewer on Rice
4. Are there specific traits that women prefer?
There seem to be
• Based on their roles on the farm and in the household
- e.g, yield, cooking quality, ease of manual threshing, straw
quality and quantity, storability, grain characteristics, losses, by-
products
• Related to family food security
– Earliness, multiple harvests, production in unfavourable conditions
(bad years, poor soil conditions)
• Production goals
– Whether producing for home consumption or market
• Based on their resource access
- e.g, land holding, labour availability
7. Preferred Traits – Sex-disaggregated
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Easy to market
Total crop duration
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Male Farmers, ALL Varieties, n=2,202 plots)
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Vigor (tillering)
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Height
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Female Farmers, ALL Varieties, n=1,540 plots)
8. Other factors influencing trait preferences
• Poverty
• Caste
• Location – vulnerability due to abiotic stresses faced
• Production purpose
• Seed source
• Family labour participation
• Access to information
• Social networks
• Intra-household decision making
9. Utilization of Rice Produced
67%
14%
19%
Consumed
Sold
Others
More than 2/3 of households have a landholding of 0.5-2 acres
10. Utilization of Rice Produced – poverty and caste
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Below Poverty Line
Above Poverty Line
Consumed Sold Others
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
General
Other Backward Caste
Scheduled Caste
Scheduled Tribe
Consumed Sold Others
11. Preferred Traits – Caste
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Cooking quality
Easy to market
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Ability to resist biotic stress
Yield/production
Top 5 Preferred Traits (General, STRV Varieties, n=95 plots)
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
Cooking quality
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Yield/production
Total crop duration
Easy to market
Top 5 Preferred Traits (OBC, STRV Varieties, n=388 plots)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Cooking quality
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Yield/production
Milling quality
Easy to market
Top 5 Preferred Traits (S.Caste, STRV Varieties, n=94 plots)
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
Cooking quality
Yield/production
ability to resist abiotic stress
Vigor (tillering)
Water requirement
Top 5 Preferred Traits (S.Tribe, STRV Varieties, n=481 plots)
12. Preferred Traits by location – Sahbhagi Dhan
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45%
Yield/production
Cooking quality
Water requirement
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Total crop duration
Vigor (tillering)
Price of seed
Physical purity
Preferred Sahbhagi Dhan Trait - Mayurbhanj (n=473)
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
Cooking quality
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Yield/production
Total crop duration
Ability to resist biotic stress
Height
Easy to market
Crop establishment method/technology
Water requirement
Where/ which source the seed comes from
Preferred Sahbhagi Dhan Trait - Nayagarh (n=54)
14. Family Labour Participation by Caste
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
General
(n=235)
Other Backward Caste
(n=626)
Scheduled Caste
(n=137)
Scheduled Tribe
(n=496)
No Family labour Male Labour only Female Labour only Both Male & Female Labour
16. Influence of information on trait preferences
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Ability to resist abiotic stress
ability to resist biotic stress
Easy to market
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Received Info on Seeds/Planting, STRV, n=303
plots)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Total crop duration
Easy to market
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Did not receive Info on Seeds/Planting, STRV,
n=282 plots)
17. Group Membership
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Credit/Microfinance group (SHGs)
Religious group
Agri/Livestock/Fisheries group
Forest users' group
Civic or charitable group
Water users' group
Mutual help or insurance group
Male Female
18. Trait preferences and Group participation
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Cooking quality
Total crop duration
Easy to market
Height
Yield/production
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Agri/Fisheries, STRV, n=40 plots)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Yield/production
Cooking quality
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Vigor (tillering)
Water requirement
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Credit/Microfinance, STRV, n=156 plots)
19. Intra-household Decision-making
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Choice of crop
Choice of variety
Adoption of STRV
Both Husband & Wife Equally Majority Husband Majority Wife
Son/Daughter Respondent (Unmarried) Other Relatives
20. Trait preferences and decision-making
0 20 40 60 80
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Total crop duration
Water requirement
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Decision by BOTH, STRV, n=423 plots)
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
Cooking quality
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Yield/production
Easy to market
Water requirement
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Decision by Husband, STRV, n=424 plots)
0 2 4 6 8 10
Cooking quality
Yield/production
Water requirement
Ability to resist abiotic stress
Ability to resist biotic stress
Top 5 Preferred Traits (Decision by Wife, STRV, n=32 plots)
21. Food for thought..
• What transformations are taking place in Rice-based Farming/Agri-food
systems (including policy) and what do we anticipate from a producer and
consumer perspective, but also how the chains evolve?
– What are the implications for future varietal trait preference?
• Who are our target groups (customers) and how do we segment them?
– Distinguish producers based on production goals, gender, socio-economic class,
cropping systems, livelihood portfolios?
– Would we distinguish between regions/agro-ecologies/stress conditions?
– Rural and Urban consumers?
• How important are preferences along the chain between producers and
consumers?
• What kind of mechanisms do we set up to update such information/knowledge
on a continuous basis to develop a ‘repeatable sustainable system’ and
‘dynamic product profiles’?