Abstract

Achieving gender equality and women’s empowerment in food systems can result in greater food security and better nutrition, and in more just, resilient, and sustainable food systems for all. This paper uses a scoping review to assess the current evidence on pathways between gender equality, women’s empowerment, and food systems. The paper uses an adaptation of the food systems framework to organize the evidence and identify where evidence is strong, and where gaps remain. Results show strong evidence on women’s differing access to resources, shaped and reinforced by contextual social gender norms, and on links between women’s empowerment and maternal education and important outcomes, such as nutrition and dietary diversity. However, evidence is limited on issues such as gender considerations in food systems for women in urban areas and in aquaculture value chains, best practices and effective pathways for engaging men in the process of women’s empowerment in food systems, and for addressing issues related to migration, crises, and indigenous food systems. And while there are gender informed evaluation studies that examine the effectiveness of gender- and nutrition- sensitive agricultural programs, evidence to indicate the long-term sustainability of such impacts remains limited. The paper recommends keys areas for investment: improving women’s leadership and decision-making in food systems, promoting equal and positive gender norms, improving access to resources, and building cross-contextual research evidence on gender and food systems.

Highlights

  • The United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) was convened in 2021 to launch bold new actions to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030

  • A 2021 map of food systems and nutrition evidence from 3ie indicates that women have a major role in food systems, relatively few studies have examined strategies on the effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving women’s decision-making power or have measured outcomes related to empowerment (Moore et al 2021)

  • We see evidence that women have differing access to resources compared with men, such as essential services, knowledge and information, technology dissemination, land, credit options, time, and markets

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) was convened in 2021 to launch bold new actions to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. Women are key actors in food systems as producers, wage workers, processors, traders, and consumers They do this work despite many constraints and limitations including lower access to opportunities, technologies, finance and other productive resources, and weak tenure and resource rights. Compared with men, women are more vulnerable to chronic food and nutrition insecurity as well as shock induced food insecurity (Madzorera and Fawzi 2020; Theis et al 2019). Such stark gender inequalities are both a cause and outcome of unsustainable food systems, and unjust food access, consumption and production. Improving gender equality and increasing women’s empowerment in food systems will result in better food security and nutrition, and more just, resilient, and sustainable food systems for all (Njuki 2021)

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