Women’s Roles in Enhancing Food Security Through Postharvest Management Among Tharu Indigenous Communities

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/dsaj.v19i1.77340

Keywords:

Postharvest, Tharu, Climate change, Indigenous knowledge, Nepal

Abstract

Postharvest loss in agriculture is considerably high in developing countries due to the lack of infrastructure and technology. Changes in agricultural practices and climate variability further aggravate the risks of postharvest losses. Postharvest loss can be minimized using technologies, including generationally tested local knowledge of Indigenous Peoples, where women play critical roles. Despite its significance in developing new knowledge and technologies, Indigenous knowledge in postharvest management and its resiliency to climate change, particularly the contribution of women, is poorly documented in Tharu communities in Nepal. This paper thus documents the roles of Tharu women and Tharu Indigenous knowledge to ensure food security and promote resilient agriculture in general and postharvest improvement in particular. The study utilized qualitative research methods to explore and document postharvest management practices and technologies of the Tharu from gendered perspectives, considering cases from the eastern region (Bara), central region (Chitwan), and western region (Bardiya) of Nepal. The research revealed that the Tharu have locally evolved postharvest practices and technologies, such as sun drying after harvest and dehari or kothi grain storage technology, that minimize postharvest losses from insects, fungus, rodents, and climatic stresses. Women are central in postharvest processing, storage, and conserving seed grain. Therefore, development approaches that enhance women’s knowledge, capacity, and efficiency in agricultural postharvest management can contribute to household and community food security and income.

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Author Biographies

Buddhi Ram Chaudhary, South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI), Department of Primary Industries and Regions (PIRSA), Government of South Australia

Buddhi Chaudhary, PhD, Research Officer in Agriculture in the Department of Primary Industries and Regions (PIRSA), Government of South Australia. Dr Chaudhary graduated from the University of Western Australia, Perth (2021) with research focused on how Indigenous knowledge helps to adapt to and mitigate the effects of climate change in agriculture. He has published a half-dozen of peer-reviewed journal articles and one book as principal author and several popular articles in local and national newspapers.

Greg Acciaioli, The University of Western Australia

Greg Acciaioli, PhD is currently a Senior Honorary Research Fellow at The University of Western Australia, where he has taught and supervised postgraduate students for three decades in Anthropology and Sociology, International Development, and Asian Studies. His degrees, all in Anthropology, are from the University of Chicago (BA Honors, 1975), Stanford University (MA, 1979) and the Australian National University (PhD, 1989).

Pashupati Chaudhary, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Bangkok, Thailand

Pashupati Chaudhary, PhD., International Green House Gas (GHG) Assessment Expert at Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Bangkok. Dr Chaudhary has earned a PhD in Environmental Science from the University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA. He has contributed to over forty peer-reviewed articles, over two dozen edited book chapters and co-supervised 6 Masters and PhD students.

Sunita Chaudhary, International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)

Sunita Chaudhary, PhD is a Biodiversity Lead at the Integrated Centre for Mountain Development (ICIMOD). She has a PhD from Macquarie University, Australia and MSc in Management of Protected Areas, Austria. She is the lead author of the on-going IPBES nexus assessment and also contributed to the IPBES regional assessment on biodiversity and ecosystem services for the Asia Pacific.

William Erskine, The University of Western Australia

William Erskine, PhD is Senior Honorary Research Fellow, UWA School of Agriculture and Environment at The University of Western Australia (UWA). He currently leads major projects in Timor Leste and Bangladesh on agricultural intensification. Scottish born, William completed a BA (University of Cambridge) in 1973, a MAg in 1976 in Papua New Guinea, and a PhD from Cambridge in 1979.

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Published

2025-06-30

How to Cite

Chaudhary, B. R., Acciaioli, G., Chaudhary, P., Chaudhary, S., & Erskine, W. (2025). Women’s Roles in Enhancing Food Security Through Postharvest Management Among Tharu Indigenous Communities. Dhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology, 19(1), 27–41. https://doi.org/10.3126/dsaj.v19i1.77340

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Articles