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Differential returns from globalization to women smallholder coffee and food producers in rural Uganda

Differential returns from globalization to women smallholder coffee and food producers in rural Uganda

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dc.contributor.author JM Kanyamurwa
dc.contributor.author S Wamala
dc.contributor.author R Baryamutuma
dc.contributor.author E Kabwama
dc.contributor.author R Loewenson
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:44Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:44Z
dc.date.issued 2013
dc.identifier.issn 17290503
dc.identifier.issn 16806905
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49141
dc.description.abstract Background : Globalization-related measures to liberalize trade and stimulate export production were applied in Uganda in the late 1980s, including in the coffee production sector, to revitalize agricultural production, increase incomes to farmers and improve rural food security. Objective : To explore the different effects of such measures on the health and dietary outcomes of female coffee and food small holder farmers in Uganda. Methods : We gathered evidence through a cross-sectional comparative interview survey of 190 female coffee producers and 191 female food producers in Ntungamo district. The study mostly employed quantitative methods of data collection, targeting the sampled households. We also utilized qualitative data; collected three months after the household survey data had been collected and their analysis had been accomplished. Using qualitative interviews based on an unstructured interview guide, extra qualitative information was collected from key informants at national, district and community levels. This was among other underlying principles to avoid relying on snapshot information earlier collected at household level in order to draw valid and compelling conclusions from the study. We used indicators of production, income, access to food and dietary patterns, women’s health and health care. Of the two groups selected from the same area, female coffee producers represented a higher level of integration into liberalised export markets. Results : Document review suggests that, although Uganda’s economy grew in the period, the household economic and social gains after the liberalization measures may have been less than expected. In the survey carried out, both food and coffee producers were similarly poor, involved in small-scale production, and of a similar age and education level. Coffee producers had greater land and livestock ownership, greater access to  inputs and higher levels of income and used a wider variety of markets than food producers, but they had to work longer hours to obtain these economic returns, and spent more cash on health care and food from commercial sources. Their health outcomes were similar to those of the food producers, but with poorer dietary outcomes and greater food stress. Conclusions : The small-scale women farmers who are producing food cannot rely on the economic infrastructure to give them support for meaningful levels of production. However, despite having higher incomes than their food producing counterparts, the evidence showed that women who are producing coffee in Uganda as an export commodity cannot rely on the income from their crops to guarantee their health and nutritional wellbeing, and that the income advantage gained in coffee-producing households has not translated into consistently better health or food security outcomes. Both groups have limited levels of autonomy and control to address these problems. Key word s: Globalization, women’s health, gender, smallholder farmers, Uganda, nutrition, food security, coffee producers, food producers
dc.publisher Makerere University, Medical School
dc.relation.ispartof African health sciences
dc.subject Globalization
dc.subject Uganda
dc.subject coffee producers
dc.subject food producers
dc.subject food security
dc.subject gender
dc.subject nutrition
dc.subject smallholder farmers
dc.subject women's health
dc.subject.mesh Adolescent
dc.subject.mesh Adult
dc.subject.mesh Agriculture/economics
dc.subject.mesh Coffee
dc.subject.mesh Commerce/economics
dc.subject.mesh Cross-Sectional Studies
dc.subject.mesh Diet/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Family Characteristics
dc.subject.mesh Female
dc.subject.mesh Food Supply/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Health Services/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Health Status
dc.subject.mesh Humans
dc.subject.mesh Income
dc.subject.mesh Internationality
dc.subject.mesh Middle Aged
dc.subject.mesh Qualitative Research
dc.subject.mesh Rural Population
dc.subject.mesh Uganda
dc.subject.mesh Women, Working/psychology
dc.subject.mesh Young Adult
dc.title Differential returns from globalization to women smallholder coffee and food producers in rural Uganda
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.4314/ahs.v13i3.44
dc.identifier.pmid 24250328
dc.identifier.mag 1973051376
dc.identifier.pmc PMC3824430
dc.identifier.lens 053-229-142-212-737
dc.identifier.volume 13
dc.identifier.issue 3
dc.identifier.spage 829
dc.identifier.epage 841
dc.subject.chemicals Coffee
dc.subject.lens-fields Agriculture
dc.subject.lens-fields Agricultural productivity
dc.subject.lens-fields Health care
dc.subject.lens-fields Globalization
dc.subject.lens-fields Unstructured interview
dc.subject.lens-fields Socioeconomics
dc.subject.lens-fields Economic growth
dc.subject.lens-fields Food security
dc.subject.lens-fields Medicine
dc.subject.lens-fields Food systems
dc.subject.lens-fields Qualitative property


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