Abstract
This article examines the role of gender in climate change adaptation and energy access in Africa. Drawing on the energy situation in Niger Republic, it argues that redressing gender concerns is critical to mitigating the impact of climate changes and energy poverty in the Sahelean country. A gender sensitivity analysis reveals that Niger is a take-off stage, a state of gender equity verified from the willingness of men to support women, as well as the entrepreneurial mindset of respondents coupled with supporting policies at both macro and micro levels. The study nonetheless recommends a more significant continental effort toward gender integration in energy planning processes. It also justifies the pursuance of alternative livelihood activities and an adjustment of policy frameworks towards universal energy access by 2030, as a means to breaking the vicious circle of limited income, increased vulnerability and narrowed opportunities that thwart gender equality and mainstreaming efforts in the country and across Africa.
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The Nigérienne Agency for the Promotion of Rural Electrification (ANPER).
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Acknowledgements
This paper is part of a Master of Science research on Community Acceptability of Renewable Energy and its Implication for Climate Actions in Africa: the case of Niger supervised by Dr Debora Ley of the Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, UK, with funding from the Risk Assessment and Reduction Strategies for Sustainable Urban Resource Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa (RARSUS/RARSUS-SEMALI) Projects in Niger and Mali.
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Antwi, S.H. The trade-off between gender, energy and climate change in Africa: the case of Niger Republic. GeoJournal 87, 183–195 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-020-10246-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-020-10246-9