442
Views
5
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
ARTICLES

Effect of Group and Leader Attributes on Men and Women Farmers’ Participation in Group Activities in Zambia

&

REFERENCES

  • Agarwal, Bina. 2010. “Does Women’s Proportional Strength Affect their Participation? Governing Local Forests in South Asia.” World Development 38(1): 98–112.
  • Araki, Minako. 2001. “Different Meanings and Interests over Women's Clubs in Rural Zambia: An Ethnography of Development in Practice.” African Study Monographs 22(4): 175–93.
  • Baumeister, Roy F., Sarah E. Ainsworth, and Kathleen D. Vohs. 2016. “Are Groups More or Less Than the Sum of their Members? The Moderating Role of Individual Identification.” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39: 1–56.
  • Beckwith, Ruthie-Marie, Mark G. Friedman, and James W. Conroy. 2016. “Beyond Tokenism: People with Complex Needs in Leadership Roles: A Review of the Literature.” Inclusion 4(3): 137–55.
  • Blekking, Jordan. 2017. “Who Gains from Rural Agricultural Cooperative Membership? Empirical Evidence from Rural Zambia.” Paper prepared for the Ostrom Workshop research Series, Indiana University, February 8.
  • Central Statistical Office. 2015. “2015 Living Conditions Monitoring Survey Report.” Republic of Zambia Central Statistical Office, Lusaka, Zambia. https://www.zamstats.gov.zm/phocadownload/Living_Conditions/2015%20Living%20Conditions%20Monitoring%20Survey%20Report.pdf.
  • Chapoto, Antony, Jones Govereh, Steven Haggblade, and Thomas Jayne. 2010. “Staple Food Prices in Zambia.” Paper Prepared for the COMESA Policy Seminar on variation in Staple Food Prices: causes, Consequence, and Policy Options, Maputo, Mozambique, January 25–6.
  • Cole, Steven M., Mary Sweeney, Abigail Moyo, and Mwauluka Mwauluka. 2016. “A Social and Gender Analysis of Northern Province, Zambia: Qualitative Evidence That Supports the Use of a Gender Transformative Approach.” Dublin, Ireland: Self Help Africa and Lusaka, Zambia: WorldFish. http://pubs.iclarm.net/resource_centre/Social-Gender-Analysis-NP-Zambia.pdf.
  • Doosje, Bertjan, Naomi Ellemers, and Russell Spears. 1995. “Perceived Intragroup Variability as a Function of Group Status and Identification.” Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 31(5): 410–36.
  • Doss, Cheryl R. 2014. “If Women Hold Up Half the Sky, How Much of the World’s Food do They Produce?” In Gender in Agriculture: Closing the Knowledge Gap, edited by Agnes R. Quisumbing, Ruth Meinzen-Dick, Terri Raney, André Croppenstedt, Julia Behrman, and Amber Peterman, 69–88. Netherlands: Springer.
  • Doss, Cheryl R. and Michael L. Morris. 2001. “How does Gender Affect the Adoption of Agricultural Innovations?: The Case of Improved Maize Technology in Ghana.” Agricultural Economics 25(1): 27–39.
  • Evans, Alice. 2014. “‘Women Can do What Men Can do’: The Causes and Consequences of Growing Flexibility in Gender Divisions of Labour in Kitwe, Zambia.” Journal of Southern African Studies 40(5): 981–98.
  • Fischer, Elisabeth and Matin Qaim. 2012. “Gender, Agricultural Commercialization, and Collective Action in Kenya.” Food Security 4(3): 441–53.
  • Fischer, Elisabeth, and Matin Qaim. 2014. “Smallholder Farmers and Collective Action: What Determines the Intensity of Participation?” Journal of Agricultural Economics 65(3): 683–702.
  • Gallani, Susanna, Ranjani Krishnan, and Jeffrey M. Wooldridge. 2015. “Applications of Fractional Response Model to the Study of Bounded Dependent Variables in Accounting Research.” Working Paper No. 16-016, Harvard Business School.
  • German, Laura, George C. Schoneveld, and Davison Gumbo. 2011. “The Local Social and Environmental Impacts of Smallholder-based Biofuel Investments in Zambia.” Ecology and Society 16(4): 12.
  • Iyer, Aarti and Michelle K. Ryan. 2009. “Why do Men and Women Challenge Gender Discrimination in the Workplace? The Role of Group Status and In-group Identification in Predicting Pathways to Collective Action.” Journal of Social Issues 65(4): 791–814.
  • Kabeer, Naila. 2004. “Globalization, Labor Standards, and Women's Rights: Dilemmas of Collective (In)Action in an Interdependent World.” Feminist Economics 10(1): 3–35.
  • Kiptot, Evelyne and Steven Franzel. 2011. “Gender and Agroforestry in Africa: A Review of Women’s Participation.” Agroforestry Systems 84(1): 35–58.
  • Leon, Andrew C. and Moonseong Heo. 2009. “Sample Sizes Required to Detect Interactions between Two Binary Fixed-effects in a Mixed-Effects Linear Regression Model.” Computational Statistics and Data Analysis 53(3): 603–8.
  • Masaiti, Gift and Joseph Chita. 2014. “Zambia: An Overview of Formal Education.” In Education in East and Central Africa, edited by C. C. Wolhuter, 423–54. London: Bloomsbury.
  • Mayoux, Linda. 2012. “Balanced Trees Grow Richer Beans: Promoting Gender Justice through Value Chain Development in Western Uganda. Gender Action Learning System Case Study 1.” Oxfam Novib. https://gamechangenetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/BalancedTrees_Case-Study.pdf.
  • Meier zu Selhausen, Felix. 2016. “What Determines Women’s Participation in Collective Action? Evidence from a Western Ugandan Coffee Cooperative.” Feminist Economics 22(1): 130–57.
  • Misiko, Michael. 2013. “Dilemma in Participatory Selection of Varieties.” Agricultural Systems 119: 35–42.
  • Mlicki, Pawel P. and Naomi Ellemers. 1996. “Being Different or Being Better? National Stereotypes and Identifications of Polish and Dutch Students.” European Journal of Social Psychology 26(1): 97–114.
  • Mohammed, B. T., and A. F. Abdulquadr. 2012. “Comparative Analysis of Gender Involvement in Agricultural Production in Nigeria.” Journal of Development and Agricultural Economics 4(8): 240–44.
  • Mtonga, Emeldah. 2012. “Cooperatives and Market Access in Zambia.” Discussion Paper. http://www.fes-zambia.org/media/publications/Cooperatives%20and%20Market%20access%20in%20Zambia.pdf (accessed February 2017).
  • Mulunga, Monde Matakala and Vongai Kandiwa. 2015. “Gender Analysis of Maize Post-Harvest Management in Zambia: A Case Study of Chipata and Katete Districts.” Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation SDC. http://doc.rero.ch/record/257816/files/31-Gender_Analysis_PHM_Zambia_March2015.pdf (accessed May 2017).
  • Mulungu, Kelvin, Elias Madzudzo, Samuel Adjei-Nsiah, and Mulani Akatama. 2017. “Platforms for Institutional Change: Assessing the Potential of Livelihoods Enhancement Groups as Community Entry Points in Zambia.” Development in Practice 27(6): 837–47.
  • Mulungu, Kelvin and Gelson Tembo. 2015. “Effects of Weather Variability on Crop Abandonment.” Sustainability 7(3): 2858–70.
  • Mwanza, Josephine. 2016. “An Evaluation of Performance of Self Help Groups in Empowerment of Women: Case of Selected Women Groups in Chipata District.” MSc Thesis, University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia. http://dspace.unza.zm/handle/123456789/4628.
  • Nair, Nirmala, Prasanta Tripathy, Harsh Pal Singh Sachdev, Hemanta Pradhan, Sanghita Bhattacharyya, Rajkumar Gope, Sumitra Gagrai, Shibanand Rath, Suchitra Rath, Rajesh Sinha, Swati Sarbani Roy, Suhas Shewale, Vijay Singh, Aradhana Srivastava, Anthony Costello, Andrew Copas, Jolene Skordis-Worrall, Hassan Haghparast-Bidgoli, Naomi Saville, and Audrey Prost. 2017. “Effect of Participatory Women’s Groups and Counselling Through Home Visits on Children’s Linear Growth in Rural Eastern India (CARING Trial): A Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial.” Lancet Global Health 5(10): e1004–16.
  • Nakhone, Lenah and Charity Kabutha. 1998. “A Review of Gender Disaggregated Data on Maize and Wheat Cropping Systems in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.” CIMMYT. http://repository.cimmyt.org/xmlui/handle/10883/3639.
  • Ogato, Gemechu Shale, Emmanuel Boon, and Janaki Subramani. 2009. “Gender Roles in Crop Production and Management Practices: A Case Study of Three Rural Communities in Ambo District, Ethiopia.” Journal of Human Ecology 27(1): 1–20.
  • Ostrom, Elinor. 2000. “Collective Action and the Evolution of Social Norms.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 14(3): 137–58.
  • Pandolfelli, Lauren, Ruth Suseela Meinzen-Dick, and Stephan Dohrn. 2007. “Gender and Collective Action: A Conceptual Framework for Analysis.” CAPRi Working Papers 64, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.
  • Papke, Leslie E. and Jeffrey M. Wooldridge. 1996. “Econometric Methods for Fractional Response Variables with an Application to 401(k) Plan Participation Rates.” Journal of Applied Econometrics 11(6): 619–32.
  • Papke, Leslie E. and Jeffrey M. Wooldridge. 2008. “Panel Data Methods for Fractional Response Variables with an Application to Test Pass Rates.” Journal of Econometrics 145(1–2): 121–33.
  • Quisumbing, Agnes R., Deborah Rubin, Cristina Manfre, Elizabeth Waithanji, Mara van den Bold, Deanna Olney, Nancy Johnson, and Ruth Meinzen-Dick. 2015. “Gender, Assets, and Market-Oriented Agriculture: Learning from High Value Crop and Livestock Projects in Africa and Asia.” Agriculture and Human Values 32(4): 705–25.
  • Rao, Elizaphan J. O. and Matin Qaim. 2013. “Supermarkets and Agricultural Labor Demand in Kenya: A Gendered Perspective.” Food Policy 38: 165–76.
  • Sender, John and Sheila Smith. 2011. Poverty, Class, and Gender in Rural Africa: A Tanzanian Case Study. London: Routledge.
  • Shieh, Gwowen. 2019. “Effect Size, Statistical Power, and Sample Size for Assessing Interactions between Categorical and Continuous Variables.” British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology 72(1): 136–54.
  • Shipekesa, Arthur M. and Thomas S. Jayne. 2012. “Gender Control and Labour Input: Who Controls the Proceeds from Staple Crop Production among Zambian Farmers?” Working Paper No. 68, Indaba Agricultural Policy Research Institute (IAPRI), Lusaka, Zambia.
  • Smith, Laura G. E., Emma F. Thomas, and Craig McGarty. 2015. “‘We must be the Change We Want to See in the World’: Integrating Norms and Identities Through Social Interaction.” Political Psychology 36(5): 543–57.
  • Woldu, Thomas, Fanye Tadesse, and Marie-Katherine Waller. 2013. “Women’s Participation in Agricultural Cooperatives in Ethiopia.” ESSP Working Papers 57, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://ideas.repec.org/p/fpr/esspwp/57.html.
  • World Bank. 2004. “Zambia Strategic Country Gender Assessment.” http://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/569301468178168044/pdf/337760ZA0SCGA.pdf.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.