30 Juin 2018 Il y a 6 ans
for a production of a documentary on impacts of climate change and gender norms and practices on rural women farmers and their successful transformative agro-ecological strategies in Tunisia.
Heinrich Boll Foundation (HBF) seeks a) to document the impact of climate change on the livelihoods of rural women farmers, b) to understand the ways their gender intersects with and is impacted by other social factors such as gender roles, expectations and other social norms and practices held in their localities (intersectional factors) that affect especially women’s socialeconomic empowerment in Senegal, Morocco, Nigeria and Tunisia, and c) to collect success stories on novel and transformative agro-ecological responses led by women in the four contexts.
HBF is producing the documentaries as part of its “Transform Africa” projects. The documentaries will be accompanied by a short paper or booklet on the same subject. The documentaries will form part of advocacy materials that will be used on both new and traditional media to influence decision-makers within and outside the continent in order to provide support to scale up adoption of agro-ecological practices and support women small holder farmers.
African societies are mainly patriarchal with social norms and gender roles that discourage women’s ownership of property. Women’s access to and control over land remains very low in most African societies. They often only have access through their husbands and lose access on the death of their husbands or they have to borrow, rent or join cooperatives to have access. In some cases, they only have access to land with poor soil quality. The small holder women famers are also not often beneficiaries of governments’ programs as they remain the bulk of the illiterate population in most countries. The majority of them also dwell in the rural areas and their access to information and to the government agencies/offices are limited. While government in the bid to attract foreign direct investments offer tax breaks, access to low interest financing and other incentives to multinational agro-business corporations, similar incentives are not offered to women. Where they exist, they are concentrated in urban locations difficult to access by rural women farmers. Women are therefore left to manage on their own dealing with flooding and rising sea levels and salinization which cause massive erosion of the coastline and degradation of soil quality thereby reducing arable land. The little that is produced by women is also impacted by post-harvest challenges including lack of post-harvest handling facilities, lack of storage facilities, lack of transport and inadequate market access information and these lock women in a cycle of poverty. Despite the gloomy situation, there are evidences across the continent which demonstrates that when women are trained on agro-ecological approaches, they have adopted these approaches and using locally available materials make organic compost that has improved soil quality resulting in improved harvest. As part of the agroecological approaches, women have been trained on transformation and processing of their produce and have taken up other value chain activities that have improved their access to market. This has improved their quality of live and their families’ resilience to climate change.
The four documentaries will be filmed in Senegal, Morocco, Nigeria and Tunisia. In each country, a local film maker will be selected to capture stories of women small holder farmers practicing agro-ecology. The documentaries will also seek to highlight clearly the transformational message: from agro-business under a patriarchal system which blocks changes of models /regimes in agriculture, discouraging women to access land and assets (including financial and information assets) towards a food sovereignty and agro ecology principles for a new agro-food system management. The documentaries will also focus on intersectional impacts and threats of climate change in concomitance with other multiple stressors of women in a patriarchal system.
The main goal for the documentary on Tunisia is to produce a film on the impacts of climate change on women small holder farmers and their responses. Specific objectives of the documentary are:
The film makers will participate in writing the initial story board, working in strict collaboration with the responsible contact person from HBF in Tunisia. The story board as well as the exact film location and the interlocutors will be agreed upon jointly with HBF.
The film makers will produce the documentary working closely with HBF local partners who will facilitate access to interlocutors in local communities.
The film maker is expected to produce an engaging film depicting women narrating their stories with passion stating clearly what they each experience and what they have done to overcome.
The selection of women to be interviewed will take into consideration the diverse socio-cultural factors that exist in Tunisia respectively the given region of the country where the women reside, ethnicity, marital status, literacy level, living with disability etc. The documentary will also highlight how climate change is having a huge impact on women farmers coupled with the gender challenges that limit women arising from patriarchal and socio-cultural issues. The documentary will also try to explain the potential change that could arise as a result of agroforestry practices in these areas as well.
The film will be shot in HD format (1080P) and delivered in mp4 HD format (1080p). For uniformity in color and quality. The film maker will provide her/his own final edit without color grading and documentary should be shot with DSLR cameras.
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