Article Synopsis

  • - Post-harvest practices and technologies can significantly reduce global aquatic harvest loss, but their impact on gender equity, particularly for women workers in fisheries, remains underexplored.
  • - The review highlights ongoing social inequalities in both traditional and improved food processing technologies, often disadvantaging women in terms of resource control and income stability.
  • - There is a need for more detailed research that includes diverse perspectives to better understand how various technologies affect gender equality and to guide effective policymaking.

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Article Abstract

Post-harvest practices and technologies are key to reducing global aquatic harvest loss. The lives of post-harvest fisheries workers, over half of them women, are deeply affected by these technologies, but their equity and equality outcomes are poorly understood. This systematic review synthesizes evidence of post-harvest aquatic food processing technology outcomes, showing that persistent inequalities in social structure and norms disadvantage women across a range of technologies, both traditional and improved, especially regarding control over resources. We found that improved technologies bring enhanced productivity and possibly income for workers, yet contracts are often precarious due to pre-existing social inequities. While power and control of resources is more unequal in factory settings, it is not necessarily equal in traditional contexts either, despite offering greater flexibility. More rigorous comparative research, including voices of diverse actors, is key to understanding the impacts of different technologies on gender equality and social justice and inform policymaking.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43016-024-01034-6DOI Listing

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