Irrigation Farming for Women Empowerment and Poverty Reduction in the Tempane District
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
Irrigation farming has become a vital strategy for addressing food insecurity, rural poverty, and
gender inequality in sub-Saharan Africa. However, uncertainties persist regarding its capacity to
promote women’s empowerment and transform livelihoods in contexts shaped by unequal land
tenure systems and gendered agricultural governance. This study examines the impact of irrigation
farming on women’s empowerment and poverty reduction in the Tempane District of Ghana.
Drawing on the Gender and Development (GAD) framework, Empowerment Theory, and
irrigation-specific models (Bryan & Garner, 2020; Meinzen-Dick et al., 2019), a pragmatic mixed
methods case study design was adopted. Data were collected from 156 survey respondents, 46 in
depth interviews, eight focus group discussions, and field observations. Quantitative data were
analysed using SPSS, while qualitative data were thematically coded with NVivo.
The study found that irrigation farming in the Tempane District remains largely male-dominated.
Women’s participation is visible yet constrained by limited access to key productive resources
such as land, credit, and agricultural inputs. Gender norms and traditional tenure systems continue
to shape participation, granting men greater control over irrigable land and decision-making
processes. Although women actively engage in small-scale and household-level irrigation, their
contributions are often undervalued and less supported institutionally.
Participation in irrigation farming, however, significantly enhanced women’s empowerment (χ² =
21.1725, p < 0.001b, df = 2) and reducing poverty (χ² = 27.6247, p < 0.001, df = 2). Despite these
benefits, constraints such as insecure land tenure, high labour demands, limited capital, restrictive
cultural norms, and exclusion from governance structures continue to impede women’s full
participation. The study concludes that irrigation farming has immense potential to advance women’s
empowerment and reduce poverty in the Tempane District. However, realising this potential
requires coherent, gender-sensitive reforms in land tenure, financial access, extension support, and
irrigation governance. By embedding empirical findings within structured theoretical frameworks,
this research contributes to the growing discourse on gender, irrigation, and inclusive rural
development in northern Ghana.
Description
MPhil. Geography And Resource Development
