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Erschienen in: Ambio 1/2015

01.02.2015 | Report

The “How” and “Why” of Including Gender and Age in Ethnobotanical Research and Community-Based Resource Management

verfasst von: Jocelyn G. Müller, Riyana Boubacar, Iro Dan Guimbo

Erschienen in: Ambio | Ausgabe 1/2015

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Abstract

This paper examines the process and outcome of participatory methods for stakeholder identification. We used focus group style participatory methodology to engage local residents in identifying key sub-groups relevant to conservation in Boumba, Niger. We then conducted a quantitative pictorial recognition study to measure the diversity of local useful plant knowledge across groups. The community identified six gender and age-class groupings relevant to the study. The effect of a participant's gender, socially-defined age class or the interaction of the two factors on the number of plants recognized varied by plant use. Medicinal plant knowledge was highest among elders. Food plant knowledge of food plants increased with age for women only. Where as the interaction of age and gender was strongest on fodder plant knowledge, where mid-aged men scored highest. We reflect on the impact that heterogeneity of local botanical knowledge has on our understanding of local natural resource use and the strengths of using a participatory approach to identifying the stakeholder groups which underlie this heterogeneity.

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Fußnoten
1
These definitions are simplifications and the age ranges are estimates made by the author, not the community as generally social factors, such as marriage, age rank in family, and gender, indicate the transition from one age class to another, just as these social indicators will change the roles and responsibilities of the individual regarding resource use. Furthermore, gender influences the age of transition as women tend to marry on average 5–10 years younger than men. Also to note is that the lower bracket for youth is also created by the authors as this was what we as interviewers set as a lower limit guideline although reported ages were often lower than what we had estimated in allowing them to participate, although self-reported ages in general were unreliable in their own right.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
The “How” and “Why” of Including Gender and Age in Ethnobotanical Research and Community-Based Resource Management
verfasst von
Jocelyn G. Müller
Riyana Boubacar
Iro Dan Guimbo
Publikationsdatum
01.02.2015
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Ambio / Ausgabe 1/2015
Print ISSN: 0044-7447
Elektronische ISSN: 1654-7209
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-014-0517-8

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