Time allocation studies: a methodological studies

dc.creatorColfer, C.J.P.
dc.date1994
dc.date2012-06-04T09:02:15Z
dc.date2012-06-04T09:02:15Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-27T13:58:18Z
dc.descriptionTime allocation studies (TAS) are invaluable for carefully documenting what people actually do and for how long, providing detailed data for comparisons between communities and between woman and men. TAS not only lays out time expenditure, but by doing so indicats something about people’s preferences and constraints in use of time. Such detail is expensive, but useful where assumptions about women’s and men’s use of time need to be challenged with quantitative data. Using a method based on random observations, the Tropsoils-Indonesia Project in Sitiung collected data that made visible women’s and men’s interest in home gardens and directed research attention to this area of crop production.
dc.identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/17578
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/69798
dc.languageen
dc.sourceColfer, C.J.P. 1994. Time allocation studies: a methodological studies . In: Feldstein, H. S. and Jiggins, J. (eds.). Tools for the field: methodologies handbook for gender analysis in agriculture. :163-170.
dc.subjectmethodology
dc.subjectgender
dc.titleTime allocation studies: a methodological studies
dc.typeBook Chapter

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