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  1. A Foucault Primer: Discourse, Power and the Subject.Alec McHoul & Grace - 1993 - Dunedin, N.Z.: Routledge. Edited by Wendy Grace.
    Who are we today? That deceptively simple question continued to be asked by the French historian and philosopher, Michel Foucault, who for the last three decades has had a profound influence on English-speaking scholars in the humanities and social sciences.; This text is designed for undergraduates and others who feel in need of some assistance when coming to grips with Foucault's voluminous and complex writings. Instead of dealing with them chronologically, however, this book concentrates on some of their central concepts, (...)
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  • Feminist Practice and Poststructuralist Theory.Chris Weedon - 1996 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Feminist Practice and Poststructuralist Theoryd offers a clear and accessible introduction to poststructuralist theory, focusing on questions of language, subjectivity and power.
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  • Using smartphone app collected data to explore the link between mechanization and intra-household allocation of time in Zambia.Thomas Daum, Filippo Capezzone & Regina Birner - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (2):411-429.
    Digital tools may help to study socioeconomic aspects of agricultural development that are difficult to measure such as the effects of new policies and technologies on the intra-household allocation of time. As farm technologies target different crops and tasks, they can affect the time-use of men, women, boys, and girls differently. Development strategies that overlook such effects can have negative consequences for vulnerable household members. In this paper, the time-use patterns associated with different levels of agricultural mechanization during land preparation (...)
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  • ‘Pesticides are our children now’: cultural change and the technological treadmill in the Burkina Faso cotton sector.Jessie K. Luna - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (2):449-462.
    Amidst broad debates about the “New Green Revolution” in Africa, input-intensive agriculture is on the rise in some parts of Africa. This paper examines the underlying drivers of the recent and rapid adoption of herbicides and genetically modified seeds in the Burkina Faso cotton sector. Drawing on 8 months of ethnographic fieldwork in the Houndé region, this article contends that economic and cultural dynamics—often considered separately in analyses of technology adoption—have co-produced a self-reinforcing technological treadmill. On the one hand, male (...)
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  • Gender power in Kenyan dairy: cows, commodities, and commercialization.Katie Tavenner & Todd A. Crane - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (3):701-715.
    In Western Kenya, smallholder dairy production is becoming incrementally commercialized through the commodification and sale of milk through formal market channels. While commercialization is often construed as a way to boost rural livelihoods through increased income from milk, emerging evidence suggests that married women are not directly benefiting from formal milk market participation. This critical issue of gender power imbalance has been framed by development interventions in economic efficiency and social justice perspectives, but thus far interventions in the sector have (...)
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  • Environmental justice and care: critical emancipatory contributions to sustainability discourse.Leonie Bellina & Daniela Gottschlich - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (4):941-953.
    Sustainability has become a powerful discourse, guiding the efforts of various stakeholders to find strategies for dealing with current and future social-ecological crises. To overcome the latter, we argue that sustainability discourse needs to be based on a critical-emancipatory conceptualization. Therefore, we engage two such approaches—environmental justice approaches informed by a plural understanding of justice and feminist political economy ones focusing on care—and their analytical potential for productive critique of normative assumptions in the dominant sustainability discourse. Both of these approaches (...)
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  • Introduction to the symposium on feminist perspectives on human–nature relations.Daniela Gottschlich, Tanja Mölders & Martina Padmanbhan - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (4):933-940.
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  • Growing burdens? Disease-resistant genetically modified bananas and the potential gendered implications for labor in Uganda.Lincoln Addison & Matthew Schnurr - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (4):967-978.
    How will the adoption of genetically modified staple crops reconfigure labor processes in Sub-Saharan Africa? This article focuses on Uganda, where GM varieties of matooke, the country’s primary carbohydrate staple, are expected to be commercialized within the next few years. The paper draws on survey data and focus groups with a random sample of over one hundred and fifty growers to investigate the potential ways a variety engineered to be resistant to banana bacterial wilt might impact labor dynamics. A BBW (...)
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  • Gender, assets, and market-oriented agriculture: learning from high-value crop and livestock projects in Africa and Asia.Agnes R. Quisumbing, Deborah Rubin, Cristina Manfre, Elizabeth Waithanji, Mara van den Bold, Deanna Olney, Nancy Johnson & Ruth Meinzen-Dick - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (4):705-725.
    Strengthening the abilities of smallholder farmers in developing countries, particularly women farmers, to produce for both home and the market is currently a development priority. In many contexts, ownership of assets is strongly gendered, reflecting existing gender norms and limiting women’s ability to invest in more profitable livelihood strategies such as market-oriented agriculture. Yet the intersection between women’s asset endowments and their ability to participate in and benefit from agricultural interventions receives minimal attention. This paper explores changes in gender relations (...)
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  • Mapping gendered pest management knowledge, practices, and pesticide exposure pathways in Ghana and Mali.Maria Elisa Christie, Emily Van Houweling & Laura Zseleczky - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (4):761-775.
    Global food security challenges demand an understanding of farmers’ gendered practices and perspectives. This research draws on data from a quantitative survey and qualitative methods to explore gender differences related to farmers’ practices, perceptions, and knowledge of pesticides and other pest management practices in tomato growing regions of Ghana and Mali. A pathways approach based on participatory mapping integrates findings and reveals gender differences in labor and knowledge at different stages of tomato production. Farmers in both countries are heavily reliant (...)
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  • Feminist Visions of Development: Gender Analysis and Policy.Cecile Jackson & Ruth Pearson - 2005 - Routledge.
    In the wake of the 4th World Conference on Women this volume brings together leading gender and development scholars who interrogate the last twenty years of work in this area. Feminist Visions of Development throws fresh light on key issues including: * gender and the environment * education * population * reproductive rights * industrialisation * macroeconomic policy * poverty. Inspired by recent feminist theoretical work, it re-examines previous structural analysis and opens the way for further research in the field.
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  • What, then, is a Chinese peasant? Nongmin discourses and agroindustrialization in contemporary China.Mindi Schneider - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (2):331-346.
    For centuries, China’s farmers practiced agriculture in ways that sustained a high level of food production without depleting or deteriorating local resources. These were smallholder farmers, who came to be called peasants, or nongmin, in the early twentieth century. Narratives on the figure of the peasant have changed dramatically and often in the intervening years, expressing broader political debates, and suggesting the question, “what, then, is a Chinese peasant?” This paper attempts to answer that question in the context of reform (...)
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  • Understanding women’s participation in irrigated agriculture: a case study from Senegal. [REVIEW]Marcia L. Nation - 2010 - Agriculture and Human Values 27 (2):163-176.
    As climate change in West Africa poses profound limitations on rainfed agriculture, policymakers and practitioners may again turn to irrigated agriculture to provide food for a growing population. Gendered analyses of irrigation projects reveal that in many cases women’s participation in irrigated agriculture has been limited due to a lack of access to land and water. Past research in the Upper Valley of the Senegal River suggests that variables other than access to land and water condition women’s participation in irrigated (...)
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  • Development interventions, changing livelihoods, and the making of female Maasai pastoralists.Elizabeth Edna Wangui - 2008 - Agriculture and Human Values 25 (3):365-378.
    The broad objective of this paper is to examine the evolution of gendered aspects of livelihood strategies and their interaction with various development interventions. Central to this is an empirical analysis of gendered divisions of labor in the context of rapidly changing pastoralist livelihoods. The paper begins with a literature review on gender roles in pastoralist societies. Two important gaps in the existing literature are identified. First, studies on gender roles are too often studies on women’s roles as men’s roles (...)
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