The
target of the project, she says, is to increase the Ghana’s women agricultural
researchers’ ratio to 40 percent within four leading research and educational
institutions. These include the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology (KNUST), the University of Development Studies, Tamale, the Savanna
Agricultural Research Institute (SARI) and the Crops Research Institute (CRI)
of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR).
Dr.
Ennin explains gender issues in crop production are important, hence the need
for research development and technology dissemination to take into
consideration the interest of women for sustainable development.
“Food
security is fundamental; it’s about sovereignty – unless you’re able to feed
your nation, you’re not an independent nation and the woman is critical”, she
stated.
Young Ghanaian agricultural
graduate, Kwabena Owusu, is happy to have studied with young ladies who had
passion for farming and agriculture.
His undergraduate class of 120 had
at least a quarter being females – and Kwabena had observed the numbers improve
in his four year stay on campus, as the ladies competed strongly with their
male colleagues for knowledge and skills.
But these young women had to suffer
ridicule as they pursued their studies in agriculture. “They were said to be
the ‘the unfashionable’ females on campus because of the way they dressed for
field practical and they were also perceived to be bookworms and not fun to be
around with”, Kwabena recalled.
Indeed
a good number of women in Ghana shun agriculture as a course of study right
from primary school, because of perceptions that farming as a profession is unfit
for ‘beautiful girls’.
This is however
not the situation today.
Dr.
Ennin of Ghana’s Crop Research Institute (CRI) is an epitome of women’s role in
making a difference in African agriculture.
Dr.
Ennin is the first Ghanaian woman to receive the National Best Agriculture
Researcher award in 1994 and the only woman to have had the award till date.
She is the first and only woman to have risen to the position of Chief Research
Scientist, the highest level within the Council for Scientific and Industrial
Research (CSIR).
She
has also served as the first female Deputy Director and recently received a
2012 Ghana Women of Excellence Award for her contributions to scientific
research and agricultural development.
For
her, beautiful, ‘sexy’ and educated young women can venture agriculture and be
successful.
Women
shy away because of the drudgery in production, she explained. “If agriculture
is seen as a very profitable, descent, mechanized and not laborious work, then
a lot of women will find it attractive”.
As
an accomplished agricultural researcher, Dr. Ennin’s focus is to come up with
improved ways of producing crops like maize, cowpea and soya beans – both at
the research station and with farmers on the field.
She
is currently involved in crop-livestock integration; introducing legumes as
dual purpose crops for human consumption and as residue for animal feed in four
African countries – Ghana, The Gambia, Benin and Mali.
“I
find it very exciting to be a woman agricultural researcher”, she said. “As an
agricultural researcher, whenever you go to the field you see that you’re among
your contemporaries, because women are mainly the food producers”.
Believing
in the role of women in agricultural production, she has set herself an
ambition to inspire young ladies to become astute agricultural researchers,
especially at the CSIR where women constitute less than 20 percent of the 700
workforce.
“Other
women are hopeful and can dream bigger because of me”, she said. “If you mentor
a man you’ve mentored an individual, but if you mentor a woman you’ve mentored
a nation”.
Mary
Mamle Apetorgbor is the fourth woman to be mentored by Dr. Stella under the African Women in Agricultural Research and
Development (AWARD) Fellowship, a
career development program that equips top women scientists across sub-Saharan
Africa to accelerate agricultural gains by strengthening their research and
leadership skills, through tailored fellowships.
Mary’s
career progression as a research scientist got stagnated at a point in time
though she felt the need to reach for something more challenging in her field
as a mushroom grower, researcher and trainer.
The
mentorship opportunity, she says, has helped build her interpersonal skills and
in less than a year into the programme, she has been able to build better
teams, manage conflicts at the workplace and become more assertive working with
farmer groups, most of who are women from diverse ethnic and cultural
backgrounds.
“I
want them to be better than me because the opportunities that they have, I
never had them and there is no excuse”, Dr. Ennin said. “When you begin to
mentor, it makes you less selfish, less self-centered; with mentoring, the
potentially natural pride of being the first and only is not cherished; you are
proud to be the first but not the only after a while”.
1 comment:
This is cool!
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