Indigenous Knowledge, Gender and Agriculture: A Scoping Review of Gendered Roles for Food Sustainability in Tonga, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Fiji
Abstract
1. Introduction
…knowledge, innovations, and practices of Indigenous and local communities around the world. It is developed from experience gained over centuries and adapted to the local culture and environment; traditional knowledge is transmitted orally from generation to generation. It tends to be collectively owned and takes the form of stories, songs, folklore, proverbs, cultural values, beliefs, rituals, community laws, local language, and agricultural practices including the development of plant species and animal breeds. Traditional knowledge is mainly of a practical nature, particularly in such fields as agriculture, fisheries, health, horticulture, forestry, and environmental management in general (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, 2007).
2. Methodology and Methods
2.1. Eligibility Criteria
2.1.1. Participants
2.1.2. Concept
2.1.3. Context
2.2. Search Strategy
- The databases searched were Scopus, ProQuest Central, ProQuest Agricultural and Environmental Science Collection, Science Direct and Taylor & Francis Journals. The journals that were searched were the Journal of Agriculture and Food Security, Regional Environmental Change, and Journal of Sustainability. Lastly, a search was conducted of the websites of the following organisations, due to their specific programmatic focus on gender in agriculture in the Pacific:
- Development of Sustainable Agriculture in the Pacific;
- Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO);
- Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC);
- United Nations in the Pacific;
- United Nations Women;
- International Women’s Development Agency.
2.3. Exclusion Criteria
- Published outside the time frame of 2015–2024 or conducted in countries outside of Fiji, Tonga, Samoa or Solomon Islands;
- Published in languages other than English;
- Editorials, reviews, opinion pieces, news articles, dissertations and thesis and books;
- Did not assess the influence of gender dynamics on Indigenous knowledge on agricultural production and sustainable food systems.
2.4. Search Terms
2.5. Study Selection
2.6. Data Extraction
2.7. Data Analysis and Presentation
3. Results
- Gendered division of labour and culturally defined gender roles;
- Decline in intergenerational traditional knowledge transmission; and
- Climate change adaptation and traditional knowledge.
3.1. Theme 1: Gendered Division of Labour and Culturally Defined Gender Roles
3.1.1. Gendered Roles and Responsibilities
3.1.2. Complementary Knowledge
3.1.3. Gender Inequality in Agricultural Decision Making
3.2. Theme 2: Decline in Intergenerational Traditional Knowledge Transmission
3.3. Theme 3: Climate Adaptation and Traditional Knowledge
Resilient Cropping and Farming
Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Author/Year/Title | Study Objective | Population or Region | Study Methodology | Key Findings |
1 | Cassinat et al. (2022) [42] ‘Traditional village roles and gender shape Samoan perceptions of climate change’ | - Examine how gender and traditional village roles shape perceptions of climate change and adaptation response | Fa’asalele’aga district in Savaii, Samoa. Participants: 12 women and 15 men. | Semi structured interviews | - How people interact with the environment is shaped by their traditional village role. - Pay attention to the environment and it will assist in long-term planning and sustainability. - Men were more likely to put agricultural adaptation as a higher priority than females due to their role in agricultural production. |
2 | Georgeou and Hawksley (2017) [23] ‘Challenges for sustainable communities in Solomon Islands: Food production, market sale and livelihoods on Savo Island’ | - Examines the challenges of community sustainability | Savo Island | -Focus groups -1-on-1 semi structured interviews -Observations | - Subsistence farming is organised by all members of a household (deciding what will be grown and working together). - Men and women engage in similar agricultural work. - Women are responsible for the production of the majority of subsistence foods. - Men focus on clearing gardens, heavy planting, harvesting tasks and sale of profitable cash crops. |
3 | Georgeou et al. (2022) [2] ‘Food Security and small holder farming in Pacific Island countries and territories: a scoping review’ | - Assess the relationship between smallholder farming and food security | Pacific Island countries and territories | Scoping review of literature | - Gendered division of activities. - Women and children undertake labour-intensive tasks, while men undertake sporadic strenuous work. - Crop diversification is a result of sharing knowledge and increased social, cultural, economic and political participation. - More research is needed on the role of gender in agricultural production in the Pacific. |
4 | Guell et al. (2021) [40] ‘“We used to get food from the garden.” Understanding changing practices of local food production and consumption in small island states’ | - Aim to understand the interlinkages and dynamics of local food production, preparation and consumption | Urban and Rural Fiji Participants: 76 men, women and youth. | Focus groups | - Participants credited their knowledge of home gardens and food to their forefathers, where knowledge was passed down from generations. - Importance of growing staple food/crops such as traditional root crops. - Shift from home gardens/farming to buying processed and imported foods. - Shift from necessity to a choice of farming. |
5 | Iese et al. (2021) [41] ‘Impacts of COVID-19 on agriculture and food systems in Pacific Island countries (PICs): Evidence from communities in Fiji and Solomon Islands’ | - Understand the implications of COVID-19 for Pacific Island countries - Identify knowledge gaps requiring further research and policy attention | Fiji and Solomon Islands | -46 focus group discussions -425 household interviews -Literature review | - Covid-19 led to ‘new farmers’ practicing unsustainable cropping systems, reducing short- and long-term agricultural production. - Covid-19 prompted traditional knowledge and practices to be implemented as well as emphasis on sharing knowledge/resources. - Traditional knowledge is a better alternative, which focuses on the resilience of agricultural production. - In Fiji and Solomon Islands, increase of food received from home gardens (fruits, vegetables and root crops). |
6 | Vogliano et al. (2021) [38] ‘Dietary agrobiodiversity for improved nutrition and health outcomes within a transitioning indigenous Solomon Island food system’ | - Assess dietary agrobiodiversity’s relationship with nutrition indicators related to diet quality and anthropometrics - Evaluate the contribution of agrobiodiversity from the local food system to diet quality | Baniata village, Solomon Islands Participants: 14 groups with men, women and youth | -Survey -Focus group discussions | - Weather changes are challenging Indigenous agricultural practices including knowledge on planting seasons and crop harvests. - Traditional knowledge occurs for women during gardening and cooking and for men during hunting and harvesting. - Traditional knowledge and knowledge of local agrobiodiversity is declining. - Men and women stated traditional language, hunting techniques and food preparation techniques are being lost due to increase of reliance and consumption of imported foods. |
Grey literature | |||||
No. | Author/year/title | Objective | Population or region | Methodology | Key findings |
1 | FAO & SPC (2019) [35] ‘Country gender assessment of agriculture and the rural sector in Fiji’ | - Analyse the agricultural and rural sector in a gender perspective at the policy, institutional, community and household levels | Rural Fiji (Ba Province and Viti Levu) Participants: men, women and 11 representatives | - Desk review of literature - Focus group discussions - Stocktake of policies and strategies - Consultations with civil society organisations | - Gendered division of labour activities. - In Fiji, decrease in reliance of subsistence food sources due to high consumption of processed foods. - Knowledge on when to plant root crops/other crops is required, especially when weather is frequently changing. - Women’s knowledge is an underused asset in rural communities. - Gender roles and power relations can constrain positive development. - Women and men recognise different indicators of environment stress/change. The two knowledge sets complement each other. |
2 | FAO & SPC (2019) [32] ‘ Country gender assessment of agriculture and the rural sector in Samoa’ | - Aims to identify ways in which socially constructed gender roles and patriarchal norms in Samoa defines men’s and women’s access to and control over resources, including land and labour | Rural Samoa (Lotofaga and Falevao/Lalomauga) Participants: men and women | - Desk review of literature - Focus group discussions - Stocktake of Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Ministry of Women, Community and Social Development - Consultations with two communities | - Gendered division of labour in agricultural activities. - Men roles are considered labour-intensive (planting taro and clearing land). - Women spend most of their time doing subsistence farming to feed their families. - Women have a significant role but are not recognised as farmers instead as helpers. - Traditional Samoan crops that were grown and eaten are no longer farmed such as swamped taro due to changing nature of soil. - Higher consumption of imported food at each meal. |
3 | FAO & SPC (2019) [33] ‘Country gender assessment of agriculture and the rural sector in Solomon Islands’ | - Analyse the agriculture and rural sector at the policy, institutional, community and household levels from a gender perspective | Rural Solomon Island (Guadalcanal and Malaita) Participants: government officials | - Desk review of literature - In-depth interviews - Consultations with civil society organisations - Site visits to communities | - Nearly equal number of women and men actively working in subsistence farming. - Gendered division of tasks, responsibilities and knowledge. - Men roles include clearing gardens, heavy planting and harvesting tasks. - Women do ongoing and labour-intensive tasks involving maintenance. - Strong emphasis on traditional food gardens. - Men and women have complementary knowledge sets on how to adapt to change and sustainably grow crops. |
4 | FAO & SPC (2019) [34] ‘Country gender assessment of agriculture and the rural sector in Tonga’ | - To improve awareness and understanding of gender perspectives in rural livelihoods in order to develop effective strategies to support food security, nutrition and resilience | Rural Tonga (Tongatapu) Participants: government officials | - Desk review of literature - In-depth interviews - Consultations with civil society organisations, private sector representatives and development partners - Field visits to communities in Tongatapu | - Men are considered to be the main breadwinners and decisionmakers, while the role of women is to take care of the household. - Division of farm labour is slowly but steadily becoming more fluid with majority of agriculture tasks completed by women and men (clearing land, ploughing, planting and harvesting materials). - Women have additional roles including weeding and maintenance of subsistence gardens. - Women are considered to be drivers of change, they forward think about the future. - For climate resilience, women and men planted crops that would mature the quickest (3 months). |
5 | Kenny & Tapu-Qiliho (2022) [17] ‘Exploring the access to, and experiences of people of diverse sexual orientation and/or gender identity engaged in fisheries: a scoping review’ | - Map participation and perceptions of people and communities of diverse SOGIE engaged in fisheries - Understand the economic and social contribution, experiences and treatment of SOGIE individuals in fisheries - Identity barriers to full participation of such individuals -Develop place-based research | Samoa (Savai’i, Upolu, Apia) | - Talanoa and storytelling - Formal and informal discussions and interviews - Participant observation | - Fa’fafine are taught by grandmothers and mothers the traditional way of doing agricultural activities. - Fa’fafine are often confined to subsistence farming rather than being able to access the full range of agricultural activities. - Fa’afatama do not have access to men’s activities and have limited access to women’s activities. - More research is needed on Fa’fafine and Fa’afatama roles in agriculture. |
6 | Loganimoce & Meo (2023) [37] ‘The significance of traditional practices in the Lau Islands, Fiji, and their importance to women for sustainable protection and production’ | - Reports on the outputs and outcomes of the Gender Inclusion Consultation with women | Fiji (Lau Province) | - Face-to-face interviews through targeted focus group discussions - Semi-formal discussions | - Agricultural roles are generalised and is influenced by factors of age, geography, culture, ethnicity and whether an individual is residing in one’s original village or spouse’s village. - Differences in roles result in knowledge and skillsets that are assigned to women or men. - Activities women perform are not considered real work rather considered a household responsibility. - Men roles include clearing gardens, maintaining large root crops and planting and tending to cash crops. - Women roles include weeding and maintenance of subsistence gardens, processing and cash crops. - Strong importance of traditionally practicing their roles and responsibilities in reviving culture and traditional practices. |
7 | Percy et al. (2022) [39] ‘Gender, agrifood value chains and climate-resilient agriculture in small island developing states’ | - Explores the interconnections between gender equality, climate resilience and agrifood value chains in small island developing states, from a food systems perspective | Samoa and Tonga | - Desk review of secondary data and literature - Interviews with FAO staff and relevant regional and subregional offices | - Gendered social norms. - Samoan and Tongan women are less active in production, instead have a greater role in food preparation, storage and value addition. - Men roles include clearing land, planting taro. - Community level, due to traditional stereotypes and cultural attitudes, women lack confidence and self-esteem to assume decision-making responsibilities. - Mostly the older generation remembers and practices traditional farming practices due to cash-oriented production system. |
8 | UN Women (2022) [43] ‘Gender and Environment survey 2022 report, Kingdom of Tonga’ | - Provide nationally representative and sex-disaggregated statistics across several thematic areas | Tonga (Nuku’alofa, Tongatapu rural, Vava’u, Ha’apai, ‘Eua, Niuas) Participants: 2136 women and 2014 men | - Household survey | - Fallowing is most likely to be practices by men at 62% compared to women at 33%. - Men work on large agricultural land, using different techniques (crop spacing, mixed cropping and intercropping). - Women mainly perform agriculture activities in home gardens. - Men and women will notice different conditions occurring depending on their assigned activity, e.g. men in Tonga will likely notice soil degradation on farming land. |
4. Discussion
4.1. Gendered Division of Labour and Culturally Defined Gender Roles
4.2. Decline in Intergenerational Traditional Knowledge Transmission
4.3. Climate Adaptation and Traditional Knowledge
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ACIAR | Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research |
FAO | Food and Agriculture Organisation |
IDRC | Canada’s International Development Research Centre |
PCC | Population or participants/Concept/Context |
PICTs | Pacific Islands Countries and Territories |
SDGs | Sustainable Development Goals |
SPC | Secretariat of the Pacific Community |
1 | Dimitra Clubs are voluntary groups of people work work together to address community issues and bring about change. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) states that “the goal of the clubs is to help rural communities become more organised and resilient, and to move away from being dependent on external aid” (FAO, 2017. FAO-Dimitra Clubs: Stepping stones for action in rural areas. [available at: https://www.fao.org/gender/resources/videos/videos-detail/FAO-Dimitra-Clubs-Stepping-stones-for-action-in-rural-areas/en] (accessed 7 November 2024) |
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PICT | Population (2021) | Land Area (in km2) |
---|---|---|
Papua New Guinea | 8,934,475 | 462,840 |
Fiji | 898,402 | 18,333 |
Solomon Islands | 728,041 | 28,230 |
Vanuatu | 301,295 | 12,281 |
Samoa | 199,853 | 2934 |
Tonga | 99,532 | 749 |
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Thomas, J.; Wali, N.; Georgeou, N.; Molimau-Samasoni, S. Indigenous Knowledge, Gender and Agriculture: A Scoping Review of Gendered Roles for Food Sustainability in Tonga, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Fiji. Land 2025, 14, 1210. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14061210
Thomas J, Wali N, Georgeou N, Molimau-Samasoni S. Indigenous Knowledge, Gender and Agriculture: A Scoping Review of Gendered Roles for Food Sustainability in Tonga, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Fiji. Land. 2025; 14(6):1210. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14061210
Chicago/Turabian StyleThomas, Jasmina, Nidhi Wali, Nichole Georgeou, and Seeseei Molimau-Samasoni. 2025. "Indigenous Knowledge, Gender and Agriculture: A Scoping Review of Gendered Roles for Food Sustainability in Tonga, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Fiji" Land 14, no. 6: 1210. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14061210
APA StyleThomas, J., Wali, N., Georgeou, N., & Molimau-Samasoni, S. (2025). Indigenous Knowledge, Gender and Agriculture: A Scoping Review of Gendered Roles for Food Sustainability in Tonga, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Fiji. Land, 14(6), 1210. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14061210