Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria

Urban and peri-urban agriculture (UPA) is seen as a subsistence-oriented production system. It has been given little formal support or recognition by city authorities in the development plans. Recent development programmes have continued to raise awareness about this phenomenon, and local authorities have begun to understand the role UPA can play in improving urban food supply and reducing poverty. Constraints to UPA such as limited access to land and good quality water, poor farmer organization, participation in policy development, and poor policy support, imply that UPA needs to be productive and profitable through diverse innovations. In Accra, Ghana and Ibadan, Nigeria, 200 urban farmers were organized into 8 producer groups and trained using technical and organizational innovations in vegetable production so as to improve yield and income. The Ibadan groups were predominantly female farmers, while Accra groups were mainly male. Training was delivered through the Urban Producer Field Schools (UPFS) on topics ranging from integrated plant production and protection principles, food safety and risk-minimization in wastewater use for irrigation to value-addition for marketing. Farmers dealt with organized marketing, targeting niche markets. The farmer groups in Accra progressed significantly over a one-year period of group strengthening as became evident in their organized structure and participation in group processes. The Ibadan group lagged behind at the group formation stage, apparently because of the hierarchical nature of the group and personal conflicts. In addition, external factors such as disease infestation affected the group processes in Ibadan. Adoption of innovations was higher among the farmers in Accra, where farmers applied at least 3 out of 6 different innovations, while adoption of innovations among female farmers in Ibadan was low: as less than 30% adopted 2 out of 5 different innovations. In both Accra and Ibadan, considerable improvement in crop performance was recorded.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Larbi, Theophilus Otchere, Cofie, Olufunke O., Amoah, Philip, Veenhuizen, René van
Format: Conference Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:urban agriculture, suburban agriculture, vegetables, food security, marketing, wastewater, farmers, capacity building,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67619
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-67619
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-676192023-06-08T20:07:05Z Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria Larbi, Theophilus Otchere Cofie, Olufunke O. Amoah, Philip Veenhuizen, René van urban agriculture suburban agriculture vegetables food security marketing wastewater farmers capacity building Urban and peri-urban agriculture (UPA) is seen as a subsistence-oriented production system. It has been given little formal support or recognition by city authorities in the development plans. Recent development programmes have continued to raise awareness about this phenomenon, and local authorities have begun to understand the role UPA can play in improving urban food supply and reducing poverty. Constraints to UPA such as limited access to land and good quality water, poor farmer organization, participation in policy development, and poor policy support, imply that UPA needs to be productive and profitable through diverse innovations. In Accra, Ghana and Ibadan, Nigeria, 200 urban farmers were organized into 8 producer groups and trained using technical and organizational innovations in vegetable production so as to improve yield and income. The Ibadan groups were predominantly female farmers, while Accra groups were mainly male. Training was delivered through the Urban Producer Field Schools (UPFS) on topics ranging from integrated plant production and protection principles, food safety and risk-minimization in wastewater use for irrigation to value-addition for marketing. Farmers dealt with organized marketing, targeting niche markets. The farmer groups in Accra progressed significantly over a one-year period of group strengthening as became evident in their organized structure and participation in group processes. The Ibadan group lagged behind at the group formation stage, apparently because of the hierarchical nature of the group and personal conflicts. In addition, external factors such as disease infestation affected the group processes in Ibadan. Adoption of innovations was higher among the farmers in Accra, where farmers applied at least 3 out of 6 different innovations, while adoption of innovations among female farmers in Ibadan was low: as less than 30% adopted 2 out of 5 different innovations. In both Accra and Ibadan, considerable improvement in crop performance was recorded. 2014 2015-07-30T06:07:35Z 2015-07-30T06:07:35Z Conference Paper Larbi, T. O.; Cofie, Olufunke; Amoah, Philip; Veenhuizen, R. V. 2014. Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria. In Nono-Womdim, R.; Mendez, D. Gutierrez; Sy Gaye, A. (Eds.). International Symposium on Urban and Peri-Urban Horticulture in the Century of Cities: Lessons, Challenges, Opportunities, Dakar, Senegal, 6 December 2010. Vol 1. Leuven, Belgium: International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS). pp.167-180. (ISHS Acta Horticulturae 1021) https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67619 Recovering and Reusing Resources in Urbanized Ecosystems en Limited Access p. 167-180
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic urban agriculture
suburban agriculture
vegetables
food security
marketing
wastewater
farmers
capacity building
urban agriculture
suburban agriculture
vegetables
food security
marketing
wastewater
farmers
capacity building
spellingShingle urban agriculture
suburban agriculture
vegetables
food security
marketing
wastewater
farmers
capacity building
urban agriculture
suburban agriculture
vegetables
food security
marketing
wastewater
farmers
capacity building
Larbi, Theophilus Otchere
Cofie, Olufunke O.
Amoah, Philip
Veenhuizen, René van
Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
description Urban and peri-urban agriculture (UPA) is seen as a subsistence-oriented production system. It has been given little formal support or recognition by city authorities in the development plans. Recent development programmes have continued to raise awareness about this phenomenon, and local authorities have begun to understand the role UPA can play in improving urban food supply and reducing poverty. Constraints to UPA such as limited access to land and good quality water, poor farmer organization, participation in policy development, and poor policy support, imply that UPA needs to be productive and profitable through diverse innovations. In Accra, Ghana and Ibadan, Nigeria, 200 urban farmers were organized into 8 producer groups and trained using technical and organizational innovations in vegetable production so as to improve yield and income. The Ibadan groups were predominantly female farmers, while Accra groups were mainly male. Training was delivered through the Urban Producer Field Schools (UPFS) on topics ranging from integrated plant production and protection principles, food safety and risk-minimization in wastewater use for irrigation to value-addition for marketing. Farmers dealt with organized marketing, targeting niche markets. The farmer groups in Accra progressed significantly over a one-year period of group strengthening as became evident in their organized structure and participation in group processes. The Ibadan group lagged behind at the group formation stage, apparently because of the hierarchical nature of the group and personal conflicts. In addition, external factors such as disease infestation affected the group processes in Ibadan. Adoption of innovations was higher among the farmers in Accra, where farmers applied at least 3 out of 6 different innovations, while adoption of innovations among female farmers in Ibadan was low: as less than 30% adopted 2 out of 5 different innovations. In both Accra and Ibadan, considerable improvement in crop performance was recorded.
format Conference Paper
topic_facet urban agriculture
suburban agriculture
vegetables
food security
marketing
wastewater
farmers
capacity building
author Larbi, Theophilus Otchere
Cofie, Olufunke O.
Amoah, Philip
Veenhuizen, René van
author_facet Larbi, Theophilus Otchere
Cofie, Olufunke O.
Amoah, Philip
Veenhuizen, René van
author_sort Larbi, Theophilus Otchere
title Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
title_short Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
title_full Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
title_fullStr Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in West African cities: experiences from Accra, Chana and Ibadan, Nigeria
title_sort strengthening urban producer organizations for innovative vegetable production and marketing in west african cities: experiences from accra, chana and ibadan, nigeria
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67619
work_keys_str_mv AT larbitheophilusotchere strengtheningurbanproducerorganizationsforinnovativevegetableproductionandmarketinginwestafricancitiesexperiencesfromaccrachanaandibadannigeria
AT cofieolufunkeo strengtheningurbanproducerorganizationsforinnovativevegetableproductionandmarketinginwestafricancitiesexperiencesfromaccrachanaandibadannigeria
AT amoahphilip strengtheningurbanproducerorganizationsforinnovativevegetableproductionandmarketinginwestafricancitiesexperiencesfromaccrachanaandibadannigeria
AT veenhuizenrenevan strengtheningurbanproducerorganizationsforinnovativevegetableproductionandmarketinginwestafricancitiesexperiencesfromaccrachanaandibadannigeria
_version_ 1779060169104162816