2019
DOI: 10.22146/jsp.35366
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Women and Coffee Farming: Collective Consciousness towards Social Entrepreneurship in Ulubelu, Lampung

Abstract: Women and coffee farming raise close attention in agriculture and development debates. History shows that women profoundly contribute to producing good quality coffee. However, their involvement has not fully brought positive development for themselves and their families. As a major coffee producer, women in Ulubelu, Lampung experience that condition. Women face market uncertainty, lack access to knowledge, lack power to make decisions, face unsupportive policies, and experience low participation in organizati… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
(16 reference statements)
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“…Barrientos (2001) portrays the connections in production, processing, and retail, to reveal how gender relations underlying these activities can affect the way how value chains 1 function. According to Leimona et al (2013), women are generally disadvantaged due to: i) the low level of participation in decision-making in farming policy, ii) the subordination in land management, iii) the stereotyping as weak actors who are expected to follow mainly traditional norms, and iv) the double burden of career and family (Leimona et al 2013 cited in Imron andSatrya 2019). According to Senders et al (2012), the current discourse on gender and value chains focuses on the economic empowerment of women.…”
Section: Intersectional Gender Perspective In the Coffee Value Chainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Barrientos (2001) portrays the connections in production, processing, and retail, to reveal how gender relations underlying these activities can affect the way how value chains 1 function. According to Leimona et al (2013), women are generally disadvantaged due to: i) the low level of participation in decision-making in farming policy, ii) the subordination in land management, iii) the stereotyping as weak actors who are expected to follow mainly traditional norms, and iv) the double burden of career and family (Leimona et al 2013 cited in Imron andSatrya 2019). According to Senders et al (2012), the current discourse on gender and value chains focuses on the economic empowerment of women.…”
Section: Intersectional Gender Perspective In the Coffee Value Chainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Coffee is one of the superior commodities owned by the province of Lampung (Hidayat et al, 2017). Besides, Lampung gets its ISOLEC fame for the biggest coffee producer in Indonesia (Imron & Satrya, 2019). Robusta coffee from West Lampung can be the example.…”
Section: Coffee Treementioning
confidence: 99%
“…al, 2016), eliminate gender inequality (Chatterje et. al, 2021), and increase awareness of individuals and groups to be empowered (Imron and Satrya, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%