Food Crisis, Gender, and Resilience in the Sahel

Lessons from the 2012 crisis in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger

Publication date: 15 June 2014
Author: Marthe Diarra Doka (CERDES), Djibrilla Madougou (AIMS), Alexandre Diouf (A & B Consulting)

This report deals with the issues, or rather, with the responses to the 2012 food crisis in the Sahel, from a gender perspective. The field research, which was conducted in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, builds on past work and reflects the statements made by local people.

The report finds that household resilience is inconceivable without rural women. And further, households in which women have a greater stake in decision making regarding food are that much more resilient.

With continued food insecurity, the perception of the role of women in Sahelian society is evolving, with the concept of an ideal woman as one who has a greater involvement in taking care of household needs. The image of the woman who expects her husband to provide for everything seems to be increasingly a thing of the past.