Gendered roles in agrarian transition: a study of lowland rice farming in Lao PDR

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Moglia, Magnus;Alexander, Kim S.;Larson, Silva;(Giger)-Dray, Anne;Greenhalgh, Garry;Thammavong, Phommath;Thephavanh, Manithaythip;Case, Peter
Abstract

Traditional lifestyles of lowland rice farmers of the southern provinces of Lao People’s Democratic Republic are rapidly changing, due to two important trends. Firstly, there is a push towards modernization and commercialization of farming. Secondly, though farmers still focus on rice farming as a key activity there is an increasing move towards diversification of livelihoods. The changes have seen the uptake of non-rice crops, livestock husbandry and forest and river utilization; as well as non-farming activities. This has influenced gender relations, impacting household agricultural production decisions and amplified transitional trends To explore the processes, we analyzed data from a study of innovation adoption amongst rice farmers in southern Lao PDR. The study revealed nuances of gender-based differences in the priorities and attitudes towards farming and off-farm activities, as well as differences in behaviour related to the adoption of new practices. Women were more focused on non-farming practices and considered engaging in the modern, non-traditional, economy more than did men. Women also reported experiencing greater challenges when engaging and trading in the agricultural marketplace. The study supports the importance of taking a gendered approach to understanding the inherent complexities within agrarian change.

Journal

Sustainability

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Volume

12

ISBN/ISSN

2071-1050

Edition

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Issue

13

Pages Count

20

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Publisher

MDPI

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.3390/su12135403