Abstract:
Rapid changes to the climate are predicted over the next few years, and these present
challenges for women’s empowerment and gender equality on a completely new scale.
There is little evidence or research to provide a reliable basis for gender-sensitive
approaches to agricultural adaptation to climate change. This article explores the
gender dimensions of climate change, in relation to participation in decision-making,
divisions of labour, access to resources, and knowledge systems. It draws on insights
from recent research on agricultural adaptation to climate change in Tanzania. The
article then explains why future gender-sensitive climate-adaptation efforts should
draw upon insights from ‘resilience thinking’, ‘political ecology’, and environmental
anthropology !/ as a way of embedding analysis of power struggles and cultural norms
in the context of the overall socio-ecological system.