Factors influencing small-scale farmers’ adoption of sustainable land management technologies in north-western Ethiopia

•Sustainable land management investments are required to alleviate land degradation problem in sub-Saharan Africa.•Uptake of sustainable land management technologies was dependent on households’ adaptive economic capacity.•Improvement in existing sustainable land management extension targeting may h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land use policy 2017-09, Vol.67, p.57-64
Hauptverfasser: Nigussie, Zerihun, Tsunekawa, Atsushi, Haregeweyn, Nigussie, Adgo, Enyew, Nohmi, Makoto, Tsubo, Mitsuru, Aklog, Dagnachew, Meshesha, Derege Tsegaye, Abele, Steffen
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container_end_page 64
container_issue
container_start_page 57
container_title Land use policy
container_volume 67
creator Nigussie, Zerihun
Tsunekawa, Atsushi
Haregeweyn, Nigussie
Adgo, Enyew
Nohmi, Makoto
Tsubo, Mitsuru
Aklog, Dagnachew
Meshesha, Derege Tsegaye
Abele, Steffen
description •Sustainable land management investments are required to alleviate land degradation problem in sub-Saharan Africa.•Uptake of sustainable land management technologies was dependent on households’ adaptive economic capacity.•Improvement in existing sustainable land management extension targeting may help to address heterogeneity in household and plot characteristics. Land degradation is a serious global problem because it leads to losses in food production and thus jeopardizes food security worldwide, particularly in developing countries. Despite numerous efforts to introduce sustainable land management (SLM) strategies and practices, their adoption by the primary target group, small-scale farmers in developing countries, has been [s]low. This study assesses the problem for the case of Ethiopia. The aim was to analyze the underlying factors that affect the adoption of SLM technologies in the Upper Blue Nile Basin. A detailed survey of 300 households and 1010 farm plots was conducted. Data were analyzed by using both descriptive and econometric analyses. Results show that farmers’ adoption of interrelated SLM measures depended on a number of socio-economic and farm-related factors in combination with the characteristics of the technologies themselves. For example, plot size and the availability of labor, as well as the gender of the household head, affected which SLM technologies were adopted by certain types of households. The adoption of SLM measures depended on the adaptive economic capacity of the farmers, which can be quite diverse even within a small region and can differ from the adoption potential in other regions. Our results suggest that SLM policies and programs have to be individually designed for specific target groups within specific regions, which in turn means that “one size fits all” and “across the board” strategies – which are quite common in the field of SLM – should be abandoned by development agencies and policymakers.
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ispartof Land use policy, 2017-09, Vol.67, p.57-64
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source PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adoption of innovations
Developing countries
Drought
Econometrics
Ethiopia
Farmers
Food production
Food security
Households
Land degradation
Land management
Land use
Land use planning
LDCs
Multivariate probit
National security
Policy making
Production
Small farms
Socioeconomic factors
Soil and water conservation
Studies
Sustainability
Target groups
Upper Blue Nile Basin
title Factors influencing small-scale farmers’ adoption of sustainable land management technologies in north-western Ethiopia
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