Agricultural value chains activity in uzbekistan
Table 1: Total number of farms including women led in 2010. №
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Table 1: Total number of farms including women led in 2010. № Provinces No of farms Including women led 1 Republic of Karakalpakstan 3,354 229 2 Andijan 6,175 152 3 Bukhara 3,953 91 4 Jizzakh 4,735 182 5 Kashkadarya 7,139 304 6 Navoiy 1,801 47 7 Namangan 4,515 94 8 Samarkand 7,723 224 9 Surhandarya 4,951 141 10 Syrdarya 3,319 98 11 Tashkent 6,051 139 12 Ferghana 7,737 180 13 Khorezm 4,681 829 Total 66,134 2,710 In one of the most densely populated provinces of Uzbekistan, Ferghana Province, where agriculture is noticeably intensified, dynamics of female farm owners (Figure 4) indicates that relative to the total number of farmers in 3 provinces (Ferghana, Andijan and Namangan) the share of female farm owners and managers was considerably low. There are several explanations to the reduction of female farmers in 2009 and 2010: 1) the consolidation of farms in 2009 through the farm optimization reform, 2) the traditional inheritance of land from parents to sons of the family, signifying that the land titles of female farm owners eventually could have been passed to sons. Figure 4: Number of women farmers in Andijan, Ferghana and Namangan (2000-2010). Source: Stulina 2015. Although, women are an important work force in the farming systems and represent a large portion of water users for agricultural production, women make up only a small minority of WUA members and water managing leaders. Stulina (2015) analyzing the representation of women (as members, and therefore as independent farmers) in Water User Associations reports that land optimization has 9 | AVC UZBEKISTAN FY2019 QUARTER 3 REPORT USAID.GOV significantly reduced the numbers of female farmers and therefore also the number of women represented in Water Users’ Associations (Table 2). This is confirmed by comparing observations within the same district of the Bukhara province where out of 30 farmers only 1woman farmer was left after several farm optimizations. 6 Table 2: Representation of women in WUAs (%) source: Stulina (2015). However, relatively small number of women farmers does not imply that women without legal land rental rights do not participate actively in agriculture. Men usually take on management roles in value chain activities, whereby women tend to participate as employees or independent wage workers. In general women’s labour is widely used in the irrigated agricultural sector, especially for cultivating, harvesting and post harvesting activities, which are often tedious and low-paid manual types of works (ADB, 2005; Mansoor & Quillin, 2006). Early agricultural reforms in Uzbekistan targeted poverty alleviation of the rural population and thus, land allocation for households’ home farming increased significantly (Scientific Information Center 2011). Majority of women have access to land management mainly through kitchen gardens, therefore, the involvement of women in subsistence and small production farming within their household plots has gained significant importance for rural women. It has been reported that kitchen gardens contribute to more than 80% (Alimdjanova 2008) of agricultural production (excluding crops such as cotton, wheat, rice) and ensure households’ food security in the rural and urban areas (Mukhamedova & Wegerich, 2014). According to production of vegetables and fruits by farm type, homestead or kitchen gardens have steadily increased their production since independence in parallel with other types of commercial farming (Figure 5 and 6). Although subsistence farming is the main target of households in their kitchen gardens 6 Interviews during the field visits to Bukhara (January 2016). ` USAID.GOV AVC UZBEKISTAN FY2019 QUARTER 3 REPORT | 10 it is very often combined with growing and selling the produce in local market (ADB 2014) or exporting the whole produce through local consolidators and agrofirms. Figure 5: Dynamics of vegetables produced by farm type in Uzbekistan during 1992-20013. Figure 6: Dynamics of fruits produced by farm type in Uzbekistan during 1992-2013. Source: stat.uz Gender inequities still exist in Uzbekistan and arise from gender disparities in access to factors of production, gendered labour markets, power imbalances or cultural norms that also affect their access to resources and participation to agricultural value chains and decision making processes. |
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