Women empowerment, Land Tenure and Property Rights, and household food security among smallholders in Nigeria

Kehinde, M. O. and Shittu, A. M. and Adeyonu, A. G. and Ogunnaike, M. G. Women empowerment, Land Tenure and Property Rights, and household food security among smallholders in Nigeria. Agriculture & Food Security.

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Abstract

Background: Empowering women, land tilting to enhance the security of Land Tenure and Property Rights (LTPRs) in agriculture vis-a-vis food and nutrition security are crucial in the pursuit of the Sustainable Development Goals. The main goal of this paper is to examine the crucial roles of women’s empowerment and LTPRs as they afect household food security among smallholder farmers in Nigeria. Methodology: Cross-sectional data were obtained from 1152 maize and rice farmers, selected by multistage ran�dom sampling across 192 communities, 16 States and the six geopolitical zones in Nigeria. The data were collected on households’ socio-economics, food security situations, empowerment and LTPRs on parcels cultivated during the 2016/17 farming season by interviewing the adult members of the farmers’ households. HFS was assessed using the United States Department of Agriculture’ HFS Survey Module and Food and Agriculture Organization guidelines for measuring Household Dietary Diversity Score. LTPRs were measured in terms of tenure type and title registration to farmlands. HFS modelling was within the framework of Poisson, Instrumental Variable Poisson (IVP) and Zero-infated Poisson (ZIP) regression methods, with endogeneity concerns and choice of specifcation addressed within Hausman specifcation tests. Results: The results of the study show that households that have a share of farmland on purchase and also partici�pate in of-farm activities are likely to be certainly food-secure in all regards. Crop diversity, households that cultivate maize only, the share of farmland on purchase and access to extension contact signifcantly reduce the severity of food insecurity while an increase in farm size increases the severity of food insecurity. Similarly, IV Poisson and ZIP Count results show that increase in the farm size results in the severity of food insecurity. The evidence with respect to women’s empowerment reveals that gender parity and female achievement in group membership, income control, as well as workload; reduce the extent of food insecurity among the farming households in Nigeria. We, however, discover that female achievement in the productive decision and credit increases the severity of food insecurity among the smallholder farmers. The analyses also reveal that the education of the household head, female achievement in the asset; group membership, and workload are the major factors that positively influenced household dietary diversity.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
Depositing User: Dr A. G. Adeyonu
Date Deposited: 15 Jan 2024 07:48
Last Modified: 15 Jan 2024 07:48
URI: https://eprints.lmu.edu.ng/id/eprint/4462

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