Gender and resource management: Community supported agriculture as caring-practice
Interviews with Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) growers in Iowa, a majority of whom are women, shed light on the relationship between gender and CSA as a system of resource management. Growers, male and female alike, are differentiated by care and caring-practices. Care-practices, historically associated with women, place priority on local context and relationships. The concern of these growers for community, nature, land, water, soil, and other resources is manifest in care-motives and care-practices. Their specific mix of motives differs: providing safe and nutritious food, educating self and others, and building relationships with other growers, shareholder-members, and the land. Care-practices include reducing or eliminating chemical usage, encouraging or accepting beneficial insects and wildlife, building soil, and creating resource management partnerships with shareholder members. CSA, viewed through a lens of care, may offer a means of transcending gender stereotypes. Copyright Kluwer Academic Publishers 2001
Year of publication: |
2001
|
---|---|
Authors: | Wells, Betty ; Gradwell, Shelly |
Published in: |
Agriculture and Human Values. - Springer, ISSN 0889-048X. - Vol. 18.2001, 1, p. 107-119
|
Publisher: |
Springer |
Subject: | Agriculture | Care | Caring-Practice Community Supported Agriculture | Diversity | Gardening | Gender | Resource Management | Rural | Women |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Migration, labor and women's empowerment : evidence from an agricultural value chain in Bangladesh
De Brauw, Alan, (2021)
-
Access and Utilisation of Health Care Services in Urban Low-income Settlements in Surat, India
Acharya, Akash, (2008)
-
Lyonette, Clare, (2008)
- More ...