4th and General Course on Gender-Responsive Breeding – The GREAT Project

By | July 25, 2019

The GREAT Project has opened its 4th training and General course on gender-responsive plant breeding attracting more men and other participants beyond Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Gender-responsive Researchers Equipped for Agricultural Transformation (GREAT) is a 5 year (2015-2020) Makerere University (Uganda) and Cornell University (USA) joint certificate program in applied gender training for agricultural researchers funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

It offers skills in gender-responsive research tailored to assisting agricultural researchers in addressing gender issues along the design, implementation, evaluation, and communication pathway of their research projects. 

Prof. Mangheni speaking during the opening ceremony

At Makerere University, the project is jointly implemented by the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CAES) and the School of Women and Gender Studies (SWGS). The project has been operational for the past three years.

Week 1 of the fourth training was officially opened by Makerere University’s GREAT Project PI Prof. Margaret Najjingo Mangheni at the Forest Cottages in Bukoto-Kampala on 22nd July 2019.

The training brought together social scientists and plant breeders from East, West and South Africa and Asia.  The participants included research teams from   India, Thailand, Benin, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Niger, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Kenya and Zimbabwe.

During the opening ceremony, Prof. Mangheni said, the GREAT Project has been in operation for the last three years where three cohorts have been trained in different commodities.

“The first one was focusing on breeders doing work on root tubers and bananas.  The second one was on cereal grains and the third one was on legumes.

This year, we have opened up so that we are working with breeding programs focusing on a whole range of crops not restricted to a commodity. But still, they are coming as an interdisciplinary team of social scientists working with a breeder on a breeding program.” The PI explained.

Prof. Mangheni said the goal of the training is to strengthen the capacity of these research teams to be able to conceptualize, design, implement and communicate gender-responsive research within a breeding program.

This year, the course attracted more men than women with other participants coming from as far as India.

“We are excited with this cohort because we have been able to broaden the reach of GREAT. Initially, we were targeting Sub-Saharan Africa but when we sent out the call for applications, it attracted a broad range beyond the anticipated target catchment area of SSA.

We have a team for this course from the World Vegetable Centre (Worldveg) South Asia/Central Asia based in Hyderabad India working on Mechanized Mung bean Harvesting in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Pakistan and they have come in to train alongside the SSA research counterparts,” Prof. Mangheni explained.

She said the GREAT Project is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation but the model had inbuilt models for sustainability so that progressively, the funding by the project decreases and the funding from participants increases.

“We hope that next year we shall run a course that is 100 per cent funded by participants based on demand. This time, we have seen a significantly increased level of funding from participants themselves, self-supported teams but we are also funding some participants from the project, so it is a mix”. Prof. Mangheni said.

In her key message, Prof. Mangheni emphasized that Gender responsiveness needs to be the norm in terms of breeding.

“The emphasis we have is that when we breed varieties, we send them out there through the seed system and we need to be cautious about stakeholders and cultural context from which they come and; this cultural context shapes and positions men and women differently and if one is not paying due attention to these socio-cultural contexts, you may end up causing unintended harm,” Mangheni explained

The nine-day training program focuses on different aspects including  Gender concepts and why gender matters in Agriculture,  What men and Masculinity have to do with gender and agriculture, why gender matters in plant breeding, positionality, the science of gender and plant breeding, principles of quantitative gender research, quantitative gender analysis plan, setting breeding priorities, and qualitative gender research methods, mixed methods and practical sessions on interviewing techniques and field case studies among others.

The courses are being delivered by a team of facilitators from Makerere University’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CAES), the School of Women and Gender Studies, staff from a collaborative research institution, and consultants from abroad.

“I am very excited to deliver the gender-responsive course which is this time broadened in approach compared to the previous ones that we held focusing on specific commodities.

This time it is the breeding of different types of commodities. We don’t want to leave anyone behind in the breeding world. We have brought most people on board, those breeding tomatoes, beans, maize, cowpeas and animal breeding commodities.

This is our fourth year of the course and we hope we shall harness the opportunities and knowledge brought from the commodity-based training now to this broad-spectrum,” Dr. Brenda Bonabaana from the CAES Department of Forestry Biodiversity and Tourism CAES narrated.

She was proud of the high diversity of the current cohort saying, the course was becoming more in demand with more participants from West, South and East Africa than before.

Dr. Bonabaana who is also an Associate Coordinator of the GREAT project will be delivering sessions on principles of qualitative and quantitative gender research with a focus on data collection methods and tools, sessions on women empowerment and coordinating the mentorship program.

Delivering on gender concepts and why gender matters in agriculture, Dr Peace Musimenta from the School of Women and Gender Studies described gender as a development issue adding that Human Development, if not engendered, is endangered.

She noted that women’s domination or exclusion from participation in agricultural opportunities raises gender issues in agriculture as a sector as far as the division of labour, land ownership and control,  decision making and agricultural marketing and irrigation are concerned.

“Agriculture is the backbone of many economies of the developing countries…if women had access to the same productive resources as men, they could increase yields on their farms by 20-30%. This could, in turn, reduce the number of hungry people in the world by 12-17 %.

Women compared to men are 10 times more likely to invest more of their earnings in their families’ well-being,” Dr. Musimenta asserted.

She said although many women depend on agriculture for their livelihoods, they face numerous gender-based constraints or barriers such as unpaid care work, stereotypes, low education, discriminatory laws e.g. on land, limited access to productive resources, limited mobility and inability to make independent decisions.

She advised gender-responsive researchers to strive for rigorous gender-focused research.

“Aim at conceptual clarity, achieve greater precision in terminology, Collect data carefully and accurately, avoid stereotypes; build the evidence base, and recognize that gender equality is good for communities, families, women & men, is key to achieving sustainable development case for gender equality,” Dr Musimenta advised.

Speaking on Gender and Agricultural Development and What men & Masculinities have got to do with it, Dr Amon Ashaba Mwiine from the School of Women & Gender Studies said men are unavoidably involved in gender concerns including control of equitable resources, decision making and being custodians of traditional knowledge.

“Some forms of Masculinities can be harmful to men & women and detrimental to development. The subordination of women and other men, the desire to control Agricultural technologies, Marketing, Networks, information, proceeds, and men withdrawing labour from agricultural production raises gender concerns”. Dr. Amon said.

The don emphasized the need for gender-responsive researchers to involve men in their research programs to realize gender-equitable Development.

“Expectations, attributes, behaviours, and roles associated with men can hinder or promote Agricultural innovations. In your research outputs, technologies & interventions, consider men’s ways of living and relationships, Dr. Amon advised.

About the GREAT theme Four training

The course has three components: Week 1 of classroom work (22-31 July 2019) and Fieldwork with support from Field trainers.

Week 2 of classroom work will take place on 13-17 January 2020. The course includes a variety of applied learning activities.

During Week 1, each participating team will complete a plan for data collection to be conducted in their field site for analysis during Week 2 of the course.

At the end of   Week 1, participants are expected to come up with a Gender research question related to participants’ projects, a Sampling framework and design, a draft data collection methods and tools, a Research plan and timeline and a draft budget for the field research grant

During the Field Training Phase, participants are expected to come up with Qualitative and quantitative data sets to be analyzed during Week 2.

During Week 2 participants will write a Seed grant proposal.  For teams selected for seed grants, a detailed timeline and budget for ensuing work will be submitted.

Funding for the fieldwork phase will be supported by teams of research projects, except one team. The cost is about $1000.

Teams will develop the fieldwork concept and tools progressively during the course and the final product presented on Day 9 for trainers’ feedback. Teams will present a well-thought-out research plan covering the Brief contextual background and the Case Study description.

Competitive research grants of $5000-10,000 for each of the top three teams or individual participants will be available post-Week 2.

Evaluations based on criteria will be shared during the course. Field trainers will support in completing seed grant research work, and publication of outputs.

Two social scientists who have demonstrated competency and have an interest in further developing their gender research skills will be selected as GREAT Gender Fellows (GGFs) at the end of Week 2: Other opportunities include Professional mentorship and additional research funding and getting positions on the GREAT CoP Advisory Board.

Source:

Report compiled by:
Jane Anyango,
Principal Communication Officer, CAES