Filtrar por:
Tipo de publicación
- Artículo (61)
- Objeto de congreso (29)
- Libro (6)
- Documento de trabajo (6)
- Tesis de maestría (5)
Autores
- Jelle Van Loon (9)
- ML JAT (6)
- Tek Sapkota (6)
- Alison Bentley (4)
- Christian Thierfelder (4)
Años de Publicación
Editores
- CICESE (3)
- Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (México). Unidad Azcapotzalco. Coordinación de Servicios de Información. (2)
- Agronomy (1)
- Frontiers Media S.A. (1)
Repositorios Orígen
- Repositorio Institucional de Publicaciones Multimedia del CIMMYT (103)
- Repositorio Institucional CICESE (3)
- Repositorio Institucional Zaloamati (2)
- Repositorio Institucional CIBNOR (1)
- Repositorio Institucional de Ciencia Abierta de la Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero (1)
Tipos de Acceso
- oa:openAccess (110)
Idiomas
Materias
- CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA (104)
- MAIZE (23)
- CLIMATE CHANGE (20)
- WHEAT (16)
- CROPS (13)
Selecciona los temas de tu interés y recibe en tu correo las publicaciones más actuales
Last mile seed delivery approaches in Sudan and beyond: an annotated bibliography
Hugo De Groote Paswel Marenya (2023, [Libro])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA SEED SYSTEMS SEED INDUSTRY BIBLIOGRAPHIES
Editorial: Functional genomic approaches in molecular breeding for crop improvement
Philomin Juliana (2023, [Artículo])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA DNA MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI CROP IMPROVEMENT
Jelle Van Loon (2022, [Objeto de congreso])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA AGRIFOOD SYSTEMS SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION COVID-19 CONFLICTS CLIMATE CHANGE
Gender analysis of household seed security : A case of maize and wheat seed systems in Nepal
Hom Nath Gartaula (2022, [Libro])
Seed Security Mountains CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA SEED SYSTEMS MAIZE WHEAT ROLE OF WOMEN WOMEN'S PARTICIPATION
Women, economic resilience, gender norms in a time of climate change: what do we know?
Cathy Farnworth Anne Rietveld Rachel Voss Angela Meentzen (2023, [Artículo])
This literature delves into 82 research articles, published between 2016 and 2022, to develop a deep understanding of how women manage their lives and livelihoods within their agrifood systems when these systems are being affected, sometimes devastatingly, by climate change. The Findings show that four core gender norms affect the ability of women to achieve economic resilience in the face of climate change operate in agrifood production systems. Each of these gender norms speaks to male privilege: (i) Men are primary decision-makers, (ii) Men are breadwinners, (iii) Men control assets, and (iv) Men are food system actors. These gender norms are widely held and challenge women’s abilities to become economically resilient. These norms are made more powerful still because they fuse with each other and act on multiple levels, and they serve to support other norms which limit women’s scope to act. It is particularly noteworthy that many institutional actors, ranging from community decision-makers to development partners, tend to reinforce rather than challenge gender norms because they do not critically review their own assumptions.
However, the four gender norms cited are not hegemonic. First, there is limited and intriguing evidence that intersectional identities can influence women’s resilience in significant ways. Second, gender norms governing women’s roles and power in agrifood systems are changing in response to climate change and other forces, with implications for how women respond to future climate shocks. Third, paying attention to local realities is important – behaviours do not necessarily substantiate local norms. Fourth, women experience strong support from other women in savings groups, religious organisations, reciprocal labour, and others. Fifth, critical moments, such as climate disasters, offer potentially pivotal moments of change which could permit women unusually high levels of agency to overcome restrictive gender norms without being negatively sanctioned. The article concludes with recommendations for further research.
Economic Resilience Intersectional Identities Women Groups Support CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA ECONOMICS RESILIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE GENDER NORMS AGRIFOOD SYSTEMS WOMEN
Manish Kakraliya madhu choudhary Mahesh Gathala Parbodh Chander Sharma ML JAT (2024, [Artículo])
The future of South Asia’s major production system (rice–wheat rotation) is at stake due to continuously aggravating pressure on groundwater aquifers and other natural resources which will further intensify with climate change. Traditional practices, conventional tillage (CT) residue burning, and indiscriminate use of groundwater with flood irrigation are the major drivers of the non-sustainability of rice–wheat (RW) system in northwest (NW) India. For designing sustainable practices in intensive cereal systems, we conducted a study on bundled practices (zero tillage, residue mulch, precise irrigation, and mung bean integration) based on multi-indicator (system productivity, profitability, and efficiency of water, nitrogen, and energy) analysis in RW system. The study showed that bundling conservation agriculture (CA) practices with subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) saved ~70 and 45% (3-year mean) of irrigation water in rice and wheat, respectively, compared to farmers’ practice/CT practice (pooled data of Sc1 and Sc2; 1,035 and 318 mm ha−1). On a 3-year system basis, CA with SDI scenarios (mean of Sc5–Sc8) saved 35.4% irrigation water under RW systems compared to their respective CA with flood irrigation (FI) scenarios (mean of Sc3 and Sc4) during the investigation irrespective of residue management. CA with FI system increased the water productivity (WPi) and its use efficiency (WUE) by ~52 and 12.3% (3-year mean), whereas SDI improved by 221.2 and 39.2% compared to farmers practice (Sc1; 0.69 kg grain m−3 and 21.39 kg grain ha−1 cm−1), respectively. Based on the 3-year mean, CA with SDI (mean of Sc5–Sc8) recorded −2.5% rice yield, whereas wheat yield was +25% compared to farmers practice (Sc1; 5.44 and 3.79 Mg ha−1) and rice and wheat yield under CA with flood irrigation were increased by +7 and + 11%, compared to their respective CT practices. Mung bean integration in Sc7 and Sc8 contributed to ~26% in crop productivity and profitability compared to farmers’ practice (Sc1) as SDI facilitated advancing the sowing time by 1 week. On a system basis, CA with SDI improved energy use efficiency (EUE) by ~70% and partial factor productivity of N by 18.4% compared to CT practices. In the RW system of NW India, CA with SDI for precise water and N management proved to be a profitable solution to address the problems of groundwater, residue burning, sustainable intensification, and input (water and energy) use with the potential for replication in large areas in NW India.
Direct Seeded Rice Subsurface Drip Irrigation Economic Profitability Energy and Nitrogen Efficiency CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE RICE SUBSURFACE IRRIGATION IRRIGATION SYSTEMS WATER PRODUCTIVITY ECONOMIC VIABILITY ENERGY EFFICIENCY NITROGEN-USE EFFICIENCY
Tek Sapkota Sieglinde Snapp (2022, [Objeto de congreso])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA CEREAL PRODUCTS PRODUCTION SYSTEMS CEREALS NITROGEN RICE WHEAT MAIZE
Jelle Van Loon (2022, [Capítulo de libro])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA CASE STUDIES AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION AGRIFOOD SYSTEMS
Chapter 14. Seed systems to support rapid adoption of improved varieties in wheat
arun joshi Hans-Joachim Braun (2022, [Capítulo de libro])
Improved Seed CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA SEEDS SEED SYSTEMS POLICIES TRAINING
Angela Meentzen (2023, [Objeto de congreso])
CIENCIAS AGROPECUARIAS Y BIOTECNOLOGÍA GENDER EQUALITY FOOD SYSTEMS CLIMATE CHANGE WOMEN'S PARTICIPATION