Bridging gender gaps through innovations in agricultural value chains in Africa
Abstract
This paper examines innovations for bridging gender gaps in agricultural value chains in Africa. It
focuses on innovative platforms for addressing gender gaps, considering women contribute up to 40
percent of labor in agricultural production. Women remain at the bottom of value chains and face
gender-specific constraints attributable to gender and social norms, discriminatory beliefs and
practices, gender-blind designs and delivery of technologies and innovations which impede women’s
participation in value chains. Consequently, women are unable to adjust to challenges and
opportunities of technological progress, commercial orientation, and global integration. This paper
suggests that gender-sensitive technological and institutional innovations is essential to promote
women’s participation in agricultural value chains and bridge the gender gap while upholding
gender-specific outcomes. The study shows that women rely on alternative institutional innovations
and arrangements such as group-based approaches in order to improve their participation in value
chains which implies the call for policies that nurture and strengthen these kinds of institutions.
Integrating research, designing value chain interventions and monitoring and evaluation with a
gender lens is essential in order to accelerate women’s participation in value chain development
programmes, while allowing them to be role models and spearhead their own empowerment