In Bolivia’s marketplaces, women rule

Potato sacks dwarf traders at one of Nadezda Amaya's research sites.

Potato sacks dwarf traders at one of Nadezda Amaya’s research sites.

When Bolivian farm families bring their produce to the sprawling market in Tiraque, husbands help their wives carry in the huge sacks of potatoes that are the main commodity, and the women take over from there.

“Men rule the fields, but women rule the markets,” said Nadezda Amaya, a master’s degree student in the Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics at Virginia Tech. Her analysis of male and female roles in the farming communities of the Andes is part of the SANREM CRSP’s research on gendered access to markets in seven countries.

Continue reading

Workshop covers community, stereotypes

Gender expert Susan Poats leads a hands-on exercise at the workshop.

Gender expert Susan Poats leads a hands-on exercise at the workshop.

Gender Equity Specialist Maria Elisa Christie organized a gender and participative methodologies workshop in October 2008 for SANREM researchers from Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia. The event was hosted by Universidad de la Cordillera and the graduate program in development sciences at Universidad Mayor de San Andrés in La Paz. The facilitator was Susan V. Poats of the non-governmental organization Grupo Randi Randi. An anthropologist and gender expert, Poats specializes in natural resource management and community conservation in the Andean region.

Continue reading