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Home › Topics › Gender › Page 11

Gender

  • In Burkina Faso, women find simple solutions to bring back trees

    Thursday June 18th, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News PABRE, Burkina Faso—A simple fence that protects against grazing livestock and bush fires is all it’s taken to transform three hectares on Bertin Doamba’s farm in central Burkina Faso from denuded and degraded land into a bio-diverse little dryland forest. The enclosure, which Doamba and his family established in […]

  • Does the gender composition of forest and fishery management groups affect resource governance and conservation outcomes...

    Monday June 15th, 2015
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    In the fields of environmental governance and biodiversity conservation, there is a growing awareness that gender has an influence on resource use and management. Several studies argue that empowering women in resource governance can lead to beneficial outcomes for resource sustainability and biodiversity conservation. Yet how robust is the evidence to support this claim? Here […]

  • Social impacts of oil palm in Indonesia: A gendered perspective from West Kalimantan

    Thursday May 07th, 2015
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    Oil palm plantations and smallholdings are expanding massively in Indonesia. Proponents highlight the potential for job creation and poverty alleviation, but scholars are more cautious, noting that social impacts of oil palm are not well understood. This report draws upon primary research in West Kalimantan to explore the gendered dynamics of oil palm among smallholders […]

  • Anne Larson: The need for a gendered approach to REDD+

    Sunday March 08th, 2015
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    CIFOR principal scientist Anne Larson speaks about the need to consider how climate change might affect men and women differently, and to incorporate gender into studies of both mitigation and adaptation. “If we don’t take a gendered approach, we’re likely to do more harm than good for women…In the REDD+ context, if the status quo […]

  • Why Would She? Polygyny and Women’s Welfare in Ghana

    Friday February 06th, 2015
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    This study examines whether polygynous marriages are beneficial to women in Ghana. While some scholars claim that women benefit from such marriages in terms of higher consumption or leisure time, others believe that such relationships can be oppressive for women, as compared to monogamous relationships. Using household data from the 2005/6 Ghanaian Living Standards Measurement […]

  • Forum sees push for gendered approach to climate change

    Sunday January 11th, 2015
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    By Kate Evans, published originally at Forests News Scientists and indigenous leaders at a gender session at the Global Landscapes Forum—on the sidelines of the annual UNFCCC climate change conference in Lima, Peru—stressed the need to consider how climate change might affect men and women differently, and to incorporate gender into studies of both mitigation […]

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Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

GLF 2016  GLF 2015  GLF 2014  GLF 2013

PAST EVENTS

Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

2016 Marrakesh  2015 Paris  2014 Peru 
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