Dry Season Gardening as Climate Action by Rural Women: A Case Study of Kuliyaa Community in Northern Ghana

Countries
Source
MECCE (Monitoring and Evaluation Climate Communication and Education Project), University of Education Winneba
Climate Objective
Adaptation
Planning and Implementation Activity
Governance and Stakeholder Engagement
Sectors and Themes
Education
Agriculture
Gender
Rural Development
Language
English
Region
Sub-Saharan Africa
Barriers Overcome
Socio-cultural
Case Summary

Droughts and shorter rainy seasons negatively impact rural livelihoods, and rural communities in Northern Ghana have long used dry season gardening education as a climate change adaptation strategy. In response to climate changes, men from the community have begun seasonal migrations to other parts of Ghana in search of jobs.

In this patriarchal community, gardening used to be largely a male practice: men typically owned gardens while the role of women and children was largely limited to domestic chores, such as preparing food, selling garden produce, bringing fencing materials, and guarding vegetables against destruction by animals. However, with the men now gone during the dry season, the women have started engaging in dry-season gardening themselves.

This case study explores the intersection of three important lenses: climate solutions developed by the global south, rural communities, and gender.

Further Information

Year Published
2023