Abstract

In recent years, social farming has developed into an opportunity for income diversification in the South Tyrolean agricultural sector. In the northern Italian province, predominantly women farmers implement the provision of social services on farms. Starting from rural gender studies and women empowerment-literature, we hypothesize that social farming promotes the empowerment of the involved women. Accordingly, our study investigates the recognized impacts of offering farm-based childcare services on three types of power: power to, power with, and power within. In order to test our hypothesis, we conducted semi-structured interviews with seven women farmers that provide childcare services and with four experts. The results show that the provision of childcare services has enhanced the autonomy of women farmers and has had positive impacts on their skills and competences. This activity has changed their social role in the community by revalorizing rural lifestyles and by enabling the reconciliation of work and personal life for working mothers. Nevertheless, women farmers have recognized some negative effects on their workload, and on their interfamilial as well as other social relations. Finally, the study discusses the relationship between the specific ethno-linguistic context in South Tyrol and the effects of the activity of childcare provision on women farmers’ empowerment.

Highlights

  • Women worldwide play an important role in agriculture and in food security

  • This paper aimed to show the empowerment potential of providing childcare services for women farmers

  • The development of women farmers towards empowerment is contingent to the continuity of gendered division of labor on the family farm; in addition to their entrepreneurial activity, women farmers are in many cases still responsible for housekeeping, farming tasks, and caring for their own children

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Summary

Introduction

Women worldwide play an important role in agriculture and in food security. they still have limited access to resources, such as soil, production means, and money [1,2,3]. Owing to the emerging relevance of farm-diversification strategies in European family farms, new opportunities for women to obtain their own space of action have opened up [11]. Thanks to their innovative entrepreneurial engagement in the frame of a multifunctional agriculture, women make use of and demonstrate their manifold skills and competences [12] and increase the visibility of their important work in society [5,13]. According to this approach to entrepreneurship, social change towards inclusion is counted as part of the output together with economic revenues [18]

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