Gender mainstreaming in sweetpotato breeding in Uganda: a case study

Front Sociol. 2023 Dec 15:8:1233102. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2023.1233102. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: In Uganda, sweetpotato [Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam] is typically a "woman's crop," grown, processed, stored and also mainly consumed by smallholder farmers for food and income. Farmers value sweetpotato for its early maturity, resilience to stresses, and minimal input requirements. However, productivity remains low despite the effort of breeding programs to introduce new varieties. Low uptake of new varieties is partly attributed to previous focus by breeders on agronomic traits and much less on quality traits and the diverse preferences of men and women in sweetpotato value chains.

Method: To address this gap, breeders, food scientists, and social scientists (including gender specialists) systematically mainstreamed gender into the breeding program. This multidisciplinary approach, grounded in examining gender roles and their relationship with varietal and trait preferences, integrated important traits into product profiles.

Results: Building on earlier efforts of participatory plant breeding and participatory varietal selection, new interventions showed subtle but important gender differences in preferences. For instance, in a study for the RTBFoods project, women prioritized mealiness, sweetness, firmness and non-fibrous boiled roots. These were further subjected to a rigorous gender analysis using the G+ product profile query tool. The breeding pipelines then incorporated these gender-responsive priority quality traits, prompting the development of standard operating procedures to phenotype these traits.

Conclusion: Following an all-inclusive approach coupled with training of multidisciplinary teams involving food scientists, breeders, biochemists, gender specialists and social scientists, integration into participatory variety selection in Uganda enabled accentuation of women and men's trait preferences, contributing to clearer breeding targets. The research has positioned sweetpotato breeding to better respond to the varying needs and preferences of the users.

Keywords: Uganda; gender mainstreaming; plant breeding; sweetpotato; value chain actors.

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the CGIAR Gender Impact Platform, building on outcomes of the CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas (RTB) which facilitated work on the triadic comparison of technologies (tricot). Some of this research was conducted as part of the grant opportunity ID: OPP1178942: Breeding RTB Products for End User Preferences (RTBfoods), to the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development (CIRAD), Montpellier, France, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF): and The Sweetpotato Genetic Advances and Innovative Seed Systems (SweetGAINS) with funding by BMFG to the International Potato Center (CIP), Lima Peru, under the terms of the grant agreement Investment ID: INV-002961. Other initiatives include The Development and delivery of biofortified Crops at Scale (DDBIO) project which was funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office.