Abstract
Many smallholder farmers in Jaman North District, Brong‐Ahafo Region, Ghana are shifting from food crop production to increased cultivation of cashew, an export cash crop. This paper examines gendered and generational tensions in increased commercialisation of land, livelihood diversification, and household food security in the context of globalisation and environmental change. Using qualitative, participatory research with 60 middle‐generation men and women, young people and key stakeholders, the research found that community members valued the additional income stream. Young people and women, however, were apprehensive about the long‐term consequences for food security of allocating so much land to cashew plantations. Young, middle, and older generations were concerned about their weak bargaining position in negotiating fair prices with export companies and intermediaries. Greater integration into the global economy exposed rural actors to multiple risks and inequalities, such as the uneven effects of economic globalisation, rises in food prices, hunger and food insecurity, growing competition for land, youth outmigration and climate change. The shift towards cashew cultivation appears to be exacerbating gender and generational inequalities in access to land and food insecurity and leading to exploitation within the global agri‐food supply chain among already vulnerable rural communities in the global South. With stronger farmer associations and cooperatives, however, cashew farmers stand the chance of benefitting from greater integration into the global economy, through strengthened bargaining positions. Greater understanding is needed about the complex interactions between sustainable food systems, changing land use and gender and generational inequalities in rural spaces.
Highlights
MARIWAH ET AL.Rural livelihoods in the global South are currently undergoing major structural changes, due to rising food prices, increasing integration into the global capitalist system and climate change (Nordic African Institute, 2015)
Lands in the Jaman North District can be classified as stool lands, that is, land communally owned by community members, and entrusted into the care of the community chiefs under the oversight of paramount chiefs
Given the criticisms of the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework (SLF) regarding the limited analysis of “power and politics” and gender relations, we argue that this framework should be used flexibly as a conceptual tool to analyse the benefits and trade‐offs of economic globalisation and changing land use, underpinned by a broader analysis of gendered and generational relations, and global–local inequalities
Summary
MARIWAH ET AL.Rural livelihoods in the global South are currently undergoing major structural changes, due to rising food prices, increasing integration into the global capitalist system and climate change (Nordic African Institute, 2015). This paper provides a fresh gendered and generational perspective on livelihood diversification and sustainable food systems through investigating the shift towards export cash crop production in a rural community in Brong‐Ahafo region of Ghana.2
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