How Inclusive Participation in Cattle Management Strengthens Women’s Resilience in Northern Haiti
Inclusive livestock management is helping mitigate climate change and bolster household resilience in Haiti.
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Women in Haiti are often at social, political and economic disadvantages compared to their male counterparts, as evidenced by Haiti’s ranking in the Gender Inequality Index. The gap is especially significant and consequential for rural women who engage primarily in subsistence farming with little to no access to nor control over productive assets and financial services. These challenges make women more vulnerable to the many shocks Haiti continues to experience, such as food insecurity, natural disasters, climate change, political instability and economic shocks. One emerging opportunity to improve livelihoods and bolster household resilience while mitigating climate change is inclusive livestock management. This brief explores opportunities and challenges for women in agriculture in Haiti, the effects of inclusive livestock management in helping women strengthen household resilience and insights to inform future resilience activities for the USAID Reforestation Project and future resilience programs in Haiti.
This brief was authored by Jennifer Plantin (Chemonics), with contributions from Carole Pierre (CIAT) and Evelyne Sylvain (Chemonics).