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Gender and groundnut value chains in Eastern Province, Zambia

2020EnglishEvaluated task order titles: Production, finance & improving technology plus (PROFIT+) & Better life alliance (BLA) | Project title: MEASURE evaluation phase IV Gender equalityCODE: 611; Zambia Africa South Of Sahara Rwanda

Metadata

Authors
Curtis, Siân | Fehringer, Jessica | Hattori, Aiko | Markiewicz, Milissa | Barry, Megan | Namonje, Thelma
Contract/Code
AID-OAA-L-14-00004
Institution
891 - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 10929 USAID. Bur. for Global Health. Ofc. HIV/AIDS
Keywords
Farms | Female empowerment | Gender dimensions of poverty | Groundnuts | Households | Peanuts | Value chains | Women UE30 Women in development (3481.2) | Food crops (1108.5) | Agricultural policy (813.0)
ID
PA00WMBB
File size
3248 KB
Source
Open PDF

Abstract

The Gender and Groundnut Value Chains impact evaluation, conducted in Eastern Province, Zambia, tested the hypothesis that the gender mainstreaming interventions implemented by two Feed the Future mechanisms?Production, Finance, & Improving Technology Plus (PROFIT+) and Better Life Alliance (BLA)?assisted in maintaining or increasing women?s control over groundnut production, marketing, and proceeds as efforts at commercialization increased.


Evaluation methods were a baseline (2014) and end line (2017) quantitative longitudinal household survey and a qualitative study. The quantitative component employed a quasi-experimental design in which pre- and post-intervention differences in outcomes were compared between project and comparison domains to measure the impact of PROFIT+ and BLA. The analysis involved descriptive frequencies, cross tabulations, and tests of statistical significance for primary outcomes. Impact analyses were conducted for selected primary outcomes using the difference-in-differences model. The qualitative component consisted of in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with beneficiaries to contextualize quantitative findings.


There was a significant increase in the quantity of groundnuts sold/bartered from baseline to end line in both the project and comparison domains among households that grew groundnuts in both seasons. The increase was significantly higher in the project domain. Women?s participation in groundnut production, marketing, and use of proceeds was maintained as efforts to commercialize groundnuts expanded. Qualitative findings indicated that beneficiaries perceived savings and lending communities (SILCs) and gender messages promoted by PROFIT+ and BLA to have impacted women?s empowerment. Evaluation findings suggest that PROFIT+ and BLA contributed both to groundnut commercialization and maintaining women?s participation in production, marketing, and use of proceeds.