Suppr超能文献

“烹饪适合每个人?”:在马拉维农村的一个炉灶干预研究中探索性别动态的复杂性。

'Cooking is for everyone?': Exploring the complexity of gendered dynamics in a cookstove intervention study in rural Malawi.

机构信息

Department of International Health LSTM, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK.

Department of Public Health, Policy and Systems, Institute of Population Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.

出版信息

Glob Health Action. 2021 Dec 6;14(1):2006425. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2021.2006425.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Household air pollution (HAP) resulting from cooking on open fires has been linked to considerable ill-health in women and girls, including chronic respiratory diseases, and has been identified as a contributor to climate change. It has been suggested that cleaner burning cookstoves can mitigate these risks, and that time saved through speedier cooking can lead to the economic empowerment of women. Despite these and other potential advantages of cookstoves, sustained use is difficult to achieve.

OBJECTIVE

We used qualitative methods (focus groups, interviews, observation) and the participatory methodology Photovoice in order to inform a deeper understanding of gendered social relationships within the Cooking and Pneumonia Study (CAPS) in rural Malawi.

METHODS

Over five CAPS villages, forty women and ten men were recruited for Photovoice activities, including image collection, village-level focus group discussion and interviews. Data were also collected from interviews with village-based community representatives.

RESULTS

This study facilitated a rich exploration of context-specific gendered household roles and power relations which found that there was space for contestation in seemingly entrenched and 'traditional' household responsibilities. The results suggest that the introduction of cookstoves through CAPS provided a focus for this contestation. It was evident that men and children also cooked, and that cooking played a central role in the gendered socialisation of children. However, there were no indications that time saved resulted in the empowerment of women.

CONCLUSION

Our findings suggest that dominant narratives of the links between gender and cookstoves are often reductive and fail to reflect the complexity of gender power relations. The use of qualitative methods incorporating Photovoice helped to facilitate an alternative 'bottom-up' view of cookstove use which demonstrated that while cookstoves may disrupt gendered relationships in target communities, positive impacts for women and girls cannot be assumed.

摘要

背景

由于使用明火做饭而导致的家庭空气污染(HAP)与女性和女童的许多健康问题有关,包括慢性呼吸道疾病,并已被确定为导致气候变化的因素之一。有人认为,燃烧更清洁的炉灶可以减轻这些风险,而且烹饪速度加快节省的时间可以使女性获得经济赋权。尽管炉灶具有这些和其他潜在优势,但难以持续使用。

目的

我们使用定性方法(焦点小组、访谈、观察)和参与式摄影图片法(Photovoice)来深入了解马拉维农村的烹饪与肺炎研究(CAPS)中性别化的社会关系。

方法

在五个 CAPS 村庄中,招募了四十名妇女和十名男子参加 Photovoice 活动,包括图像收集、村级焦点小组讨论和访谈。还从对基于村庄的社区代表的访谈中收集了数据。

结果

这项研究深入探讨了特定于背景的性别化家庭角色和权力关系,发现看似根深蒂固和“传统”的家庭责任中存在争议的空间。结果表明,通过 CAPS 引入炉灶为这种争议提供了焦点。很明显,男人和孩子也做饭,烹饪在儿童的性别社会化中起着核心作用。然而,没有迹象表明节省的时间会使妇女获得赋权。

结论

我们的研究结果表明,性别与炉灶之间联系的主导叙事往往过于简化,未能反映性别权力关系的复杂性。定性方法的使用,包括 Photovoice,有助于促进对炉灶使用的替代性“自下而上”观点,表明虽然炉灶可能会破坏目标社区中的性别关系,但不能假设对妇女和女孩会产生积极影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5014/8667901/c3b79dd5302f/ZGHA_A_2006425_F0001_OC.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验