Gendered Time, Seasonalityand Nutrition: Insights from two Indian districts

Few studies make the link between women’s work in agriculture, their household and care responsibilities and nutritional outcomes

Abstract

There has been considerable attention to women’s work in nutritional studies, given women’s central role in child-bearing, child-care and child-rearing. Similarly, employment data indicates women’s high work-participation in agriculture – a phenomenon commonly known as the feminisation of agriculture, albeit as labourers and unpaid family workers, rather than independent cultivators. It is therefore surprising that there are relatively few studies that make the link between women’s work in agriculture, their household and care responsibilities, and nutritional outcomes.

This research is supported by the Department for International Development’s by the Leveraging Agriculture for Nutrition in South Asia (LANSA) programme

Citation

Mitra A and Rao N. Gendered Time, Seasonality and Nutrition: Insights from two Indian districts. Research Brief No.9, July 2017, 4p

Gendered Time, Seasonality and Nutrition: Insights from two Indian districts

Updates to this page

Published 1 July 2017