Carney, J. A.Elias, M.2016-04-192016-04-192006Canadian Journal of African Studies 40(2): 235-267http://hdl.handle.net/10919/68944Metadata only recordThis article discusses how local gendered knowledge and practices in the shea agroforestry production in West Africa shape landscapes over time and space. Using political ecology, the article also discusses how shea nut production has been influenced and controlled by regional and global markets throughout pre-colonial, colonial, and contemporary histories. Using fieldwork studies in West Africa from 2001 to 2004, these authors specifically explore local indigenous knowledge, and the role of women's knowledge, conservation, and control over shea butter and oil production. In shea agroforestry, women cultivate and conserve the trees through seed selection, fire, processing, and protection. Emphasis is centered on the need to recognize local men and women's knowledge of the butter tree and the landscape for sustainable resource management and development.text/plainen-USIn CopyrightCommodity cropsAgrobiodiversityFamilyConservationEconomic impactsTraditional farmingTree cropsEthnicity/raceEnvironmental impactsEmpowermentCommunity developmentFireWomenIndigenous communityGovernment policyGenderAgroforestryLocal knowledgeGovernmentMenForestsAgricultural ecosystemsIndigenous knowledgeGenderAgroforestryAfricaMaliGuineaFarmingLocal knowledgeFireConservationColonializationGlobal marketsTreesFarm/Enterprise Scale Field Scale GovernanceRevealing gendered landscapes: Female knowledge and agroforestry of African sheaAbstractCopyright 2006 Canadian Association of African Studies and JSTOR