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A water-secure world
Feminisation of agriculture, out-migration and new gender roles: an imperative to change conventional engagements
with women water users
Fraser Sugden – IWMI NepalResearch team: Fraser Sugden, Floriane Clement, Niki Maskey, Anil Philip, Vidya Ramesh, Ashok Rai, Naryan Prasad Sah, Yaman Sardar, Gajendra Sah, Lalita Sah
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A water-secure world
Introduction• Political-economic and climate induced agrarian stress is causing
increase vulnerability for communities across the Eastern Gangetic plains
• This is driving male out-migration and a transfer of new agricultural labour responsibilities to females
• New patterns of vulnerability • New adaptation needs for women who are left behind• This calls for a new approach to gender mainstreaming in
Agricultural Water Management
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A water-secure world
Kathmandu
Tibetan Autonomous Region
Nepal
Survey sites
Darbhanga
Madhubani
MITHILANCHAL
Bihar Biratnagar
Janakpur
FORMER FOREST BELT
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Contemporary agrarian structure• Mithilanchal: large cultural region in North Bihar (India) and the
Terai-Madhesh (Nepal).• Tenants and marginal farmers
– Tenants, marginal farmers (less than 0.5ha), and landless labourers, form at least 75% of the rural population, and constitute base of agrarian structure.
– Tenants and marginal farmers mostly Dalit and Mahadalit in caste heartland, and adivasi in the former forest belt
• Large farmers and landlords– At the apex of the agrarian structure, is a local landlord class in the
Maithili caste heartland. Mostly ‘large farmers’ rather than zamindars of the past.
– Absentee landlord class in the former forest belt (predominantly in Nepal), with mostly adivasi tenants.
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A water-secure world
Adhratadhi, Madhubani Phot
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IWM
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A water-secure world
Sitpur, Morang
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IWM
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A water-secure world
Part 1 - New drivers of change
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A water-secure world
1. Climate change
• Significant changes observed in climate patterns over last two decades– More unpredictability – Greater chilling during winter– Extended dry spells, particularly further west– More extreme precipitation events
• Dry season agriculture becoming increasingly risky.
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2. Broader pattern of agrarian stress
• Unequal terms of trade for agriculture, driving up price of inputs, particularly in Nepal. – High fuel prices on both sides of the border (affects fertiliser and
fuel costs)– Limited subsidies for farmers in Nepal
• Rising cost of living– Linked in part to rising fuel prices– Increased monetisation of the economy, rising demand for cash.
• Political instability, state weakness– Limited investment in key infrastructural works, including power
generation– Rampant local level corruption
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3. Agricultural adaptation?• Limited spread of low tech climate smart
technologies• Limited investment in surface canal networks • On farm adaptation options?
– investment in tube wells and pumping equipment to offset delayed harvests
– investment in labour saving technologies (threshers, tractors).
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IWM
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A water-secure world
Thalaha, Morang
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A water-secure world
3. Agricultural adaptation?
• Adaptation not scale neutral• Many technologies are out of reach for
poorer farmers • E.g. Less than 6% of marginal/tenant
farmers own pumps sets or wells
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4. Non agricultural adaptation: out-migration
• Diversification of livelihoods through non-farm labour – Can address both climatic and non-climatic stress on
livelihoods for marginal and tenant farmer majority– Particularly as cost of ‘adapting’ within agriculture is high
• Significant rise in out-migration on a seasonal and long term. – Migration across all wealth groups– but marginal
cultivators are more dependent upon this income– High waged versus low waged migrants
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Table 5: % of migrants from different wealth groups D
hanu
sha
Mor
ang
Mad
huba
ni
Dha
nush
a
Mor
ang
Mad
huba
ni
Dha
nush
a
Mor
ang
Mad
huba
ni
Dha
nush
a
Mor
ang
Mad
huba
ni
Dha
nush
a
Mor
ang*
Mad
huba
ni
tenants or part tenants
landless labourers small owner cul-tivators <0.5ha
medium owner cultivators 0.5-
2ha
large owner cul-tivators >2ha
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Seasonal migrants
Permanent migrants
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5. Feminisation of agriculture• Women are playing an increased role in agriculture
following the out–migration of male family members• Significant rise in women headed households• New tasks such as managing irrigation and on farm
technology and marketing are becoming part of the female domain
• Agriculture remains crucial for family members left behind, particularly for the poorest cultivators. – Migrant remittances can not support whole family.– 50-67% of women headed households are still engaged in
agriculture– Women led agriculture subsidises migrant economy
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Part II – Feminisation of agriculture: new patterns of vulnerability
Jaleshwor, Mahottari Phot
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1. Vulnerability due to increased workload
• Significant increase in work responsibilities for those ‘left behind’.
• Affects wellbeing, while also reduces time to engage in other livelihood activities
• Affects poorest cultivators– 66% to 83% of women headed households from marginal/tenant
farmer class – Larger land owners employ labourers to compensate for loss of
male labour– Greater vulnerability amongst marginal/tenant farmers
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2. Vulnerability due to loss of resources
• Loss of regular cash income in women headed households from marginal/tenant farmer class
• Greater vulnerability to climatic stresses such as droughts or late monsoons– Sporadic income from migrant husbands/sons– 2012: Estimated 75% loss of paddy due to late rains, and 65%
loss of wheat due to Spring thunderstorms– Depletion of family grain stocks, yet no income to purchase grain
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Bhuptatti, Madhubani Phot
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IWM
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PART III - Agrarian stress and equitable adaptation in the context of out-migration
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1. Challenges to investment in irrigation at a household level
• Access to low cost, efficient irrigation becomes even more important for those left behind in villages.
• Yet significant challenges remain– Greater responsibilities does not always translate into greater
control over finances– Challenges accessing institutional finance– Tube well installation schemes biased against women headed
households (lack of land ownership certificates, citizenship)
• Capacity for females in women headed households to adapt is dependent upon one’s position in agrarian structure and migrant hierarchy
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2. Decaying communal irrigation resources
• Irrigation canal management long the male domain
• Limited effective efforts for meaningful women’s participation aside from tokenistic ‘quotas’
• Significant challenge for women headed households who need to negotiate for water, and ensure their needs are met
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3. Positive lessons in women’s leadership in water management
• Sakhi foundation in Bihar successfully created women run fishing collectives in Madhubani district
• Reserved fishing rights for women run cooperative to half the village ponds.
• Combined with fisheries training and gender empowerment activities
• All costs and profits shared equally• Can this model be applied to irrigation resources?
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Lessons and policy response
• The structure of the agrarian workforce has changed significantly,
• High out-migration – yet agriculture remains critical for women and family members remaining at home.
• Need to actively engage with women cultivators– Too much focus by practitioners on ‘traditional’ female domain
such as sanitation, household water use– Women are now taking critical role in supplying irrigation for
arable crops and are leading on farm management– Need to engage with women directly, address issues of property
rights, and ownership of resources
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Thank you
Nayabazaar, Morang
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