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This book lends valuable insight into the gendered dimensions of the impact of climate change on subsistence farming in Cameroon, so seriously unattended. Building on the voices and experiences of often marginalized local peoples in the Cameroon grassland,the book delivers an informative exploration of the ways in which women s crucial engagement with subsistence agriculture is currently being undermined by incidences of climate change. Challenges such as erratic seasonal patterns;shifting planting seasons;increase in weed production;poorer crop yields;loss of income and resulting emotional…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book lends valuable insight into the gendered dimensions of the impact of climate change on subsistence farming in Cameroon, so seriously unattended. Building on the voices and experiences of often marginalized local peoples in the Cameroon grassland,the book delivers an informative exploration of the ways in which women s crucial engagement with subsistence agriculture is currently being undermined by incidences of climate change. Challenges such as erratic seasonal patterns;shifting planting seasons;increase in weed production;poorer crop yields;loss of income and resulting emotional and financial stresses mean that women the indispensible providers of food,home care and agricultural production,are forced to stretch further in order to accommodate extra burdens related to adaptation and mitigation.However, these realities are not confined to the rural women of Cameroon.They echo the constant struggle of rural women across Africa and the larger south,as they attempt to maintain a precariously balanced equilibrium on a scale that seems permanently tipped against them. Gender sensitive policies are thus urgently needed to address these plethoric and often confounding challenges
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Autorenporträt
Sah Nancy is doctoral researcher on the construction of gender issues in climate policy at the Centro de Investigaciones Feministas (CIFEM) at the University of Oviedo, Spain.James Emmanuel Wanki is Irishaid Anna Lindh fellow at the Centre for Peace and Development Studies,Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick,Ireland