Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"culture" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Mechanistic insights of plant-microbe interactions for enhancing the growth and productivity of plants under salt stress conditions for agricultural sustainability Sharma B; Negi R; Jyothi SR; Gupta A; Jhamta S; Yadav N; Kaur N; Puri P; Thakur SS; Bagavathiappan S; Thakur N; Shreaz S; Madouh TA; Yadav AN; 41245209
BIOLOGY
2 An analytical framework to decode socioeconomic interplays in pesticides and fertilizer container collection patterns using land dynamics metrics Chowdhury R; Karimi N; Xu X; An C; Gitifar A; Ng KTW; 40795518
ENCS
3 Unraveling "Feeling Bad" in a Non-Western Culture: Achievement Emotions in Japanese Medical Students Nomura O; Sunohara M; Akatsu H; Wiseman J; Lajoie SP; 40625926
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Developmental exposure to the physical and social world and responses to risk among college students from four cultural contexts Chentsova-Dutton Y; Gürcan-Yildirim D; Wu J; Zakharov I; Ryder AG; 40147255
CONCORDIA
5 Agriculture s impact on water-energy balance varies across climates Zaerpour M; Hatami S; Ballarin AS; Papalexiou SM; Pietroniro A; Nazemi A; 40096605
ENCS
6 "We don't do any of these things because we are a death-denying culture": Sociocultural perspectives of Black and Latinx cancer caregivers Nwakasi C; Esiaka D; Nweke C; Chidebe RCW; Villamar W; de Medeiros K; 39327878
SOCANTH
7 An Ecological Approach to Conceptual Thinking in Material Engagement Alessandroni N; Malafouris L; Gallagher S; 39118997
CONCORDIA
8 A Public Health Ethics Case for Mitigating Zoonotic Disease Risk in Food Production Bernstein J; Dutkiewicz J; 33997264
SOCANTH
9 Nourishing the Nexus: A Feminist Analysis of Gender, Nutrition and Agri-food Development Policies and Practices Vercillo S; Rao S; Ragetlie R; Vansteenkiste J; 37361474
SOCANTH
10 The impact of cultural identity, parental communication, and peer influence on substance use among Indigenous youth in Canada Reynolds A; Keough MT; Blacklock A; Tootoosis C; Whelan J; Bomfim E; Mushquash C; Wendt DC; O' Connor RM; Burack JA; 37796930
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Gender and contextual variations in self-perceived cognitive competence Kuzyk O; Gendron A; Lopez LS; Bukowski WM; 36405181
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Rethinking microbial infallibility in the metagenomics era O' Malley MA; Walsh DA; 34160589
BIOLOGY
13 The Epistemology of Evolutionary Psychology Offers a Rapprochement to Cultural Psychology Gad Saad 33224071
JMSB

 

Title:Nourishing the Nexus: A Feminist Analysis of Gender, Nutrition and Agri-food Development Policies and Practices
Authors:Vercillo SRao SRagetlie RVansteenkiste J
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37361474/
DOI:10.1057/s41287-023-00581-1
Publication:The European journal of development research
Keywords:AgricultureDevelopmentFeminismFoodGenderNutrition
PMID:37361474 Category: Date Added:2023-06-26
Dept Affiliation: SOCANTH
1 Department of Historical and Cultural Studies, University of Toronto, Scarborough, Toronto, Canada.
2 School of Environment, Enterprise and Development, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.
3 Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
4 Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfred Laurier University, Waterloo, Canada.
5 School of Environment, Resources and Sustainability, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.

Description:

This article applies feminist critiques to investigate how agri-food and nutritional development policy and interventions address gender inequality. Based on the analysis presented of global policies and examples of project experiences from Haiti, Benin, Ghana, and Tanzania, we find that the widespread emphasis on gender equality in policy and practice generally ascribes to a gender narrative that includes static, homogenized conceptualizations of food provisioning and marketing. These narratives tend to translate to interventions that instrumentalize women's labor by funding their income generating activities and care responsibilities for other benefits like household food and nutrition security without addressing underlying structures that cause their vulnerability, such as disproportionate work burdens, land access challenges, among many others. We argue that policy and interventions must prioritize locally contextualized social norms and environmental conditions, and consider further the way wider policies and development assistance shape social dynamics to address the structural causes of gender and intersecting inequalities.





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