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Famine in Ethiopia, Gender roles, International aid - Coggle Diagram
Famine in Ethiopia
Governance
Low funding
Government spends most funding on "defence" leading to severe regression in agriculture and food, water security
More than 5m people do not have enough to eat. Some 400,000 of those are facing what aid agencies call “catastrophic” hunger—the last step on the path to mass starvation.
Restrictions
Although aid agencies reckon that 100 trucks of food and medicine must enter the state each day to avert famine, only about a tenth of that is being let through by the government
War
Since fighting broke out in November between federal forces and those of Tigray’s rebellious former ruling party, perhaps 2m out of 6m Tigrayans are thought to have fled their homes. Many could now starve because the government has let so little food into the region
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1),Gender roles are clearly defined in Ethiopia. Men hold the most authority, whilst women are generally considered to be subordinate to their husbands and fathers
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Gender roles
3),women have inferior access to education,information,money and decision -making authority compared with men in Ethiopia.thus women are more vulnerable to have famine then men.
2),women live under conditions of social, political and economic inequality, receiving only 30% of land titles, 10% of credit and 5% of technical assistance.
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