Gender Determinants of Agroecological Practices in Wetlands in South Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo
View/ Open
Date
2024Author
Mugisho, Gilbert M
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Wetlands are extensively and differently exploited based on gender because they are among
the most productive ecosystems on which farmers rely for survival. In the eastern Democratic
Republic of the Congo, wetland degradation and loss are mostly caused by changes in wetland
use, which has an impact on ecological functions and biodiversity. The objectives of this study
were to assess gender differential activities in the wetlands, to analyse gender-related factors
affecting farmers’ utilisation of improved agroecological practices, and to assess the
institutional arrangements governing gendered wetland access and utilisation in South Kivu.
The research was conducted in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The data
was collected from March to May 2023. A mixed-method approach was used, which included
farmer surveys, key informant interviews, and focus groups discussion. Descriptive and
inferential analyses were used to analyse quantitative data. To compare the gender gap in
agricultural income, the Exogenous Switching Regression (ESR) model and Blinder Oaxaca
decomposition model were used. The gender determinants of agroecological practices were
investigated using a multivariate probit (MVP) model and Chi square test. The qualitative data
was thematized for wetlands governance using thematic framework analysis. The findings of
this study revealed that position and activities in wetland farming differed depending on
gender, socio-economic variables, and wetland location and governance. Male household head
represented more than 70% of farmers in the Uvira wetlands and between 70 to 95% in Kabare.
Female household heads represented less than 30% of farmers surveyed in Uvira, and between
6% and 30% in Kabare. Men were more likely to be involved in wetland farming because they
had easier access to land and money. Farm income for male household head were 16% higher
than that of female household head. Many factors contribute to the gap, including territory,
employment, the duration of wetlands use, the use of organic fertilizers, market-oriented
xiv
agriculture education, and land access. Both males and females’ households head cultivated
identical crops during high agricultural production seasons (the rainy season for rice in Uvira
and the dry season for vegetables). During low-production seasons, crop selection is genderbased.
Females were interested in staple crops, whereas males were interested in seasonally
adapted cash crops. Men and women used traditional and indigenous agroecological practices
to increase yields and ensure wetland sustainability. The Chi-square test (at the 5% and 10%
thresholds) revealed that the use of mechanical weeding, hedging, shallow tillage, direct
seeding, bio pesticides, clearings and weeds was gender dependent. More than 40% of men
used mechanical weeding, compared to 25% of women. Hedging was practiced by only 1.5%
of women compared to 8.5% of men. Shallow tillage was practiced by about 20% of men
compared to 7% of women. Men used bio pesticides (18%) compared to 9% of women. About
60% of men used clearings and weeds compared to 49% of women. Wetland governance was
shared by the local government, customary leaders, concession holders, and farmers who
belonged to farmers’ organisations or agricultural cooperatives. Wetland governance was
based more on utilisation than on sustainable conservation. There is need to regulate and
coordinate wetland activities to ensure gender equity in wetlands’ access and utilisation. For
sustainable agriculture, the government should provide incentive subsidies to farmers who
comply with agroecological practices.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: