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The major importance of minor resources: women and plant biodiversity

Exposing gender biases in environmental planning

Authors: P. Howard
Publisher: Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Livelihoods Programme, IIED, 2003

This paper describes how women predominate in plant biodiversity management in their roles as housewives, plant gatherers, home gardeners, herbalists, seed custodians and informal plant breeders. It argues, however, that because most plant use, management and conservation occurs within the domestic realm, and because the principal values of plant genetic resources are localised and non-monetary, women are largely invisible to outsiders and are easily undervalued despite this predomination. Gender bias has prevailed in scientific research about people-plant relationships, and conservation policies and programmes are still largely blind to the importance of the domestic sphere, of women and of gender relations for biodiversity conservation, and to the importance of plant biodiversity for women's status and welfare. Traditional knowledge and indigenous rights to plants are everywhere sex-differentiated, and gender inequalities are also implicated in processes leading to biological erosion.

The paper argues that achieving the goals of the Convention on Biological Diversity, particularly those related to sustainable use and to benefit sharing, will require much greater attention to women's knowledge, management and rights, and to the domestic sphere. Examples of positive steps suggested include:

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