Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach

In southern Africa, conservation agriculture (CA) has been promoted to address low agricultural productivity, food insecurity, and land degradation. However, despite significant experimental evidence on the agronomic and economic benefits of CA and large scale investments by the donor community and national governments, adoption rates among smallholders remain below expectation. The main objective of this research project was thus to investigate why previous efforts and investments to scale CA technologies and practices in southern Africa have not led to widespread adoption. The paper applies a multivariate probit model and other methods to survey data from 4,373 households and 278 focus groups to identify the drivers and barriers of CA adoption in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The results show that declining soil fertility is a major constraint to maize production in Zambia and Malawi, and drought/heat is more pronounced in Zimbabwe. We also find gaps between (a) awareness and adoption, (b) training and adoption, and (c) demonstration and adoption rates of CA practices in all three countries. The gaps are much bigger between awareness and adoption and much smaller between hosting demonstration and adoption, suggesting that much of the awareness of CA practices has not translated to greater adoption. Training and demonstrations are better conduits to enhance adoption than mere awareness creation. Therefore, demonstrating the applications and benefits of CA practices is critical for promoting CA practices in all countries. Besides, greater adoption of CA practices requires enhancing farmers’ access to inputs, addressing drudgery associated with CA implementation, enhancing farmers’ technical know-how, and enacting and enforcing community bylaws regarding livestock grazing and wildfires. The paper concludes by discussing the implications for policy and investments in CA promotion.

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Main Authors: Tufa, A.H., Kanyamuka, J., Alene, A.D., Ngoma, H., Marenya, P.P., Thierfelder, C., Banda, H., Chikoye, D.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Frontiers 2023
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Adoption, Focus Group Discussion, CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE, CLIMATE CHANGE, Sustainable Agrifood Systems,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22598
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-225982024-01-30T21:05:27Z Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach Tufa, A.H. Kanyamuka, J. Alene, A.D. Ngoma, H. Marenya, P.P. Thierfelder, C. Banda, H. Chikoye, D. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Adoption Focus Group Discussion CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE CLIMATE CHANGE Sustainable Agrifood Systems In southern Africa, conservation agriculture (CA) has been promoted to address low agricultural productivity, food insecurity, and land degradation. However, despite significant experimental evidence on the agronomic and economic benefits of CA and large scale investments by the donor community and national governments, adoption rates among smallholders remain below expectation. The main objective of this research project was thus to investigate why previous efforts and investments to scale CA technologies and practices in southern Africa have not led to widespread adoption. The paper applies a multivariate probit model and other methods to survey data from 4,373 households and 278 focus groups to identify the drivers and barriers of CA adoption in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The results show that declining soil fertility is a major constraint to maize production in Zambia and Malawi, and drought/heat is more pronounced in Zimbabwe. We also find gaps between (a) awareness and adoption, (b) training and adoption, and (c) demonstration and adoption rates of CA practices in all three countries. The gaps are much bigger between awareness and adoption and much smaller between hosting demonstration and adoption, suggesting that much of the awareness of CA practices has not translated to greater adoption. Training and demonstrations are better conduits to enhance adoption than mere awareness creation. Therefore, demonstrating the applications and benefits of CA practices is critical for promoting CA practices in all countries. Besides, greater adoption of CA practices requires enhancing farmers’ access to inputs, addressing drudgery associated with CA implementation, enhancing farmers’ technical know-how, and enacting and enforcing community bylaws regarding livestock grazing and wildfires. The paper concludes by discussing the implications for policy and investments in CA promotion. 2023-05-06T00:30:15Z 2023-05-06T00:30:15Z 2023 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22598 10.3389/fsufs.2023.1151876 English Climate adaptation & mitigation Nutrition, health & food security Mixed Farming Systems Diversification in East and Southern Africa Resilient Agrifood Systems Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) CGIAR Trust Fund https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130271 CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose Open Access Malawi Zambia Zimbabwe Switzerland Frontiers 7 2571-581X (Online) Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 1151876
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country México
countrycode MX
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databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Adoption
Focus Group Discussion
CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Adoption
Focus Group Discussion
CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Adoption
Focus Group Discussion
CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Adoption
Focus Group Discussion
CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
Tufa, A.H.
Kanyamuka, J.
Alene, A.D.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Thierfelder, C.
Banda, H.
Chikoye, D.
Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
description In southern Africa, conservation agriculture (CA) has been promoted to address low agricultural productivity, food insecurity, and land degradation. However, despite significant experimental evidence on the agronomic and economic benefits of CA and large scale investments by the donor community and national governments, adoption rates among smallholders remain below expectation. The main objective of this research project was thus to investigate why previous efforts and investments to scale CA technologies and practices in southern Africa have not led to widespread adoption. The paper applies a multivariate probit model and other methods to survey data from 4,373 households and 278 focus groups to identify the drivers and barriers of CA adoption in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The results show that declining soil fertility is a major constraint to maize production in Zambia and Malawi, and drought/heat is more pronounced in Zimbabwe. We also find gaps between (a) awareness and adoption, (b) training and adoption, and (c) demonstration and adoption rates of CA practices in all three countries. The gaps are much bigger between awareness and adoption and much smaller between hosting demonstration and adoption, suggesting that much of the awareness of CA practices has not translated to greater adoption. Training and demonstrations are better conduits to enhance adoption than mere awareness creation. Therefore, demonstrating the applications and benefits of CA practices is critical for promoting CA practices in all countries. Besides, greater adoption of CA practices requires enhancing farmers’ access to inputs, addressing drudgery associated with CA implementation, enhancing farmers’ technical know-how, and enacting and enforcing community bylaws regarding livestock grazing and wildfires. The paper concludes by discussing the implications for policy and investments in CA promotion.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Adoption
Focus Group Discussion
CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
author Tufa, A.H.
Kanyamuka, J.
Alene, A.D.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Thierfelder, C.
Banda, H.
Chikoye, D.
author_facet Tufa, A.H.
Kanyamuka, J.
Alene, A.D.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Thierfelder, C.
Banda, H.
Chikoye, D.
author_sort Tufa, A.H.
title Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
title_short Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
title_full Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
title_fullStr Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern Africa: mixed-methods approach
title_sort analysis of adoption of conservation agriculture practices in southern africa: mixed-methods approach
publisher Frontiers
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22598
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