Connecting Public Policies for Family Farmers and Women’s Empowerment: The Case of the Brazilian Semi-Arid
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptual Framework
3. Public Policies for Family Farmers of the Brazilian Semi-Arid (Bahia)
3.1. Financial Support
3.2. Technical Assistance and Technology Transfer
3.3. Food Security and Mediated Market
4. The Study Area: Rain-Fed Family Farming Food System and the Fundo de Pasto Communities
5. Materials and Methods
- Income stability and autonomy.
- Housework.
- Ensuring food and water security.
- Political engagement.
6. Results
6.1. Policy Impacts on Women’s Income Stability and Autonomy
“The programmes [PAA and PNAE] were important because, first of all, we women were not involved in the marketing part. That was men’s work, wasn’t it? And secondly, selling fruits and vegetables as a group is better than as an individual. Before, when our families sold at the local market, we couldn’t sell all the stock, so that the food spoiled and ruined. Today we put together all the food we grow on our farms and sell to the government at once. Food doesn’t spoil anymore and it’s also cheaper for us” (Informant 2; member of Melancia’s community).
6.2. Policy Impacts on Women’s Roles in Food and Water Security and Housework Conditions
“Informant 3: technical assistance showed us how to make our system more resilient.
Informant 4: we already knew all those techniques, but they showed us why they were important not only for resilience but for growing more nutritious food.
Informant 3: we now consume more of the vegetables we grow in our farm, because the quality is much better than the ones we find in the supermarket or in the local market. We never know if they use fertilizers or agrochemicals” (Informants 3 and 4, members of Melancia and Riacho Grande communities).
“Before the cisterns, we took water from the dams, but the water was not always available. In the winter [rainy season, from January to April], usually, we could find water, but when the drought began, the water got more turbid and muddy. Also, several animals consumed the same water as we. I had to boil the water to offer to my family, but still, my kids had diarrhea and vomiting. Now everything is better. When I wake up, I prepare breakfast and then go to the field to help my colleague to peel the cassava she cultivates. I have more time to dedicate myself to work and earn a little bit of money” (Informant 5, member of Ladeira Grande community).
“Informant 6: in my house, women always worked as farmers harvesting, planting and taking care of the animals. However, my mother and my grandmother never earned any money from these activities. It was much more a matter of planting food to eat.
Informant 7: my father never consulted my mother to decide what to buy for the farm. He was involved in selling the products. He decided how to spend the money we got.
Researcher: how about now that you work in the productive group and earn money … do you participate in decisions at home?
Informant 8: as the money is mine, I have more rights to decide, right?
Informant 7: people here in the group usually decide together with their husbands what to do with the money, but when the money is not ours they [the husbands] spend the money the way they think it’s better” (Informants 6, 7 and 8, members of the Ladeira Grande community).
6.3. Women’s Political Engagement and Social Dynamics
“When women occupy these spaces, they do not want to silence anyone, nor prevent men from taking a position about feminism. We just want to exist in certain spaces that have been denied us, historically, and to coexist with different agendas. Men can talk about women’s demands, but it is important that they are aware about their privileged social position. The first step toward a more equal society, in terms of gender, consists in men acknowledging their privileges and taking responsibility for the social structure that subordinates women” (Informant 9, former president of CONSEA).
6.4. Are Public Policies a Pathway to Women’s Empowerment?
7. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Ethics Statement
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Community | Size of Land Occupied (Hectares) | Number of Families |
---|---|---|
Melancia | 600 | 42 |
Riacho Grande | 12,000 | 211 |
Ladeira Grande | 2500 | 60 |
Focus Groups Themes | Number of Participants | Participating Communities |
---|---|---|
Fundo de pasto communities (history of the communities) | 4 | Riacho Grande, Ladeira Grande and Melancia |
Food and water security, food sovereignty and food policies | 10 | Riacho Grande, Ladeira Grande and Melancia |
Rain-fed family farming food system and food policies | 12 | Riacho Grande, Ladeira Grande and Melancia |
Income, struggle for land and political engagement | 9 | Riacho Grande, Ladeira Grande and Melancia |
Productive groups, institutional market and women’s roles at the household and community levels * | 12 | Ladeira Grande |
Productive groups, institutional market and women’s roles at the household and community levels * | 12 | Melancia |
Personal Level | Relational Level | |
---|---|---|
Individual | Household | Community |
Acknowledgment of women’s individual knowledge (e.g., agricultural practices or milk production) | Involvement in household decision-making—expenditure, investment and household management decisions | Participation in community groups |
Acknowledgment of women’s role in food and water security | Contribution to household income | Political participation |
Personal and financial autonomy | Ability to reduce time devoted to care responsibilities | Participation in public events |
Ability to redistribute burden of care responsibilities | Contribution to community social needs | |
Ability to have more time for leisure and socializing |
Topics Observed in Speeches and Perspectives of Participants | Personal Level |
Acknowledgment of women’s individual knowledge (e.g., agricultural practices or milk production) | Participants value women’s knowledge of agricultural practices |
Acknowledgment of women’s role in food and water security | Women are aware of their importance for ensuring food and water security, but their partners do not recognize their work |
Women’s personal and financial autonomy | Women have achieved financial stability through the institutional market, but they still have difficulty achieving autonomy when it comes to productive groups |
Relational Level (Household) | |
Involvement in household decision-making—expenditure, investment and household management decisions | Not reached |
Contribution to household income | Women managed to contribute to household income |
Ability to reduce time devoted to care responsibilities | Not reached |
Ability to redistribute burden of care responsibilities | Not reached |
Ability to have more time for leisure and socializing | Not reached |
Relational Level (Community) | |
Participation in community groups | Women participate in productive groups, which provide food for food procurement programmes |
Political participation | Women hold positions in institutions and expand contact with government agencies |
Participation in public events | Women felt more motivated to attend lectures, workshops, etc. |
Contribution to community social needs | Women became more directly involved in the struggle for land |
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Brandão, E.A.F.; Santos, T.d.R.; Rist, S. Connecting Public Policies for Family Farmers and Women’s Empowerment: The Case of the Brazilian Semi-Arid. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5961. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12155961
Brandão EAF, Santos TdR, Rist S. Connecting Public Policies for Family Farmers and Women’s Empowerment: The Case of the Brazilian Semi-Arid. Sustainability. 2020; 12(15):5961. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12155961
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrandão, Emily Aparecida Ferreira, Thiago da Rocha Santos, and Stephan Rist. 2020. "Connecting Public Policies for Family Farmers and Women’s Empowerment: The Case of the Brazilian Semi-Arid" Sustainability 12, no. 15: 5961. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12155961
APA StyleBrandão, E. A. F., Santos, T. d. R., & Rist, S. (2020). Connecting Public Policies for Family Farmers and Women’s Empowerment: The Case of the Brazilian Semi-Arid. Sustainability, 12(15), 5961. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12155961