Accueil ›
New technology for rural women: paradoxes of sustainability
This article discusses the difficulties of reaching relatively poor populations with labour saving technologies. Taking the case of milling and dehulling technologies in Senegal and The Gambia, it presents a simple analytic model that helps to explain why the vast majority of these labour saving machines are under-utilised in rural areas. Though donors continue to widely support such projects, in few cases do they provide significant benefits to the broad population in the short term, and neither are they sustainable in the longer term. The key constraint is the lack of effective demand due to rural women's limited income-generating opportunities. In the time saved using a machine to dehull or mill their coarse grains, they are unable to earn enough money even to pay the fees to use the machine, much less to gain a surplus.
Author:
Issue
Recherche guidée
Cliquez sur un terme pour lancer une recherche.
Keywords
- Aide internationale (278)
- Societé civile (482)
- Conflits et reconstruction post-conflit (86)
- Environnement (90)
- Genre et diversité sociale (204)
- Mondialisation (91)
- Gouvernance et politiques publiques (220)
- Travail et moyens de subsistence (203)
- Méthodologie (288)
- Droits humains (133)
- Secteur social (142)
- Téchnologie (45)
Regions
- États arabes (28)
- Middle East (6)
- Océanie et le Japon (32)
- Europe centrale et de L’Est/CEI (31)
- Asie de l’Est (87)
- Amérique latine et les Caraïbes (164)
- Amérique du Nord (29)
- Asie du Sud (186)
- South East Asia (16)
- Afrique sub Saharienne (308)
- Europe occidentale et du Sud (42)
Type de contenu
- Abstract (1430)
- Book review (59)
- Book (20)