Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi

The challenges of land degradation, climate change and food insecurity have led to the introduction of conservation agriculture (CA) aimed at enhancing yield and soil quality. Despite positive biophysical results, low adoption rates have been the focus of studies identifying constraints to wider uptake. While the adoption framework is popular for measuring agricultural innovation, objective adoption measurements remain problematic and do not recognize the contextual and dynamic decision-making process. This study uses a technographic and participatory approach to move beyond the adoption framework and understand: (a) how agricultural decision-making takes place including the knowledge construction, (b) how agriculture is performed in a context of project intervention and (c) how practice adaptation plays out in the context of interacting knowledge. Findings confirm that farmer decision-making is dynamic, multidimensional and contextual. The common innovation diffusion model uses a theory of change, showcasing benefits through training lead farmers as community advocates and demonstration trials. Our study shows that the assumed model of technology transfer with reference to climate-smart agriculture interventions is not as linear and effective as assumed previously. We introduce four lenses that contribute to better understanding complex innovation dynamics: (a) social dynamics and information transfer, (b) contextual costs and benefits, (c) experience and risk aversion, and (d) practice adaptation. Investments should build on existing knowledge and farming systems including a focus on the dynamic decision process to support the 'scaling up, scaling out and scaling deep' agenda for sustainable agricultural innovations.

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Main Authors: Hermans, Thirze D.G., Whitfield, Stephen, Dougill, Andrew J., Thierfelder, Christian
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Malawi, climate-smart agriculture, conservation agriculture, no-tillage, scaling, southern Africa,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-should-rethink-adoption-in-agricultural-innovation-empiric
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6110662024-12-04 Hermans, Thirze D.G. Whitfield, Stephen Dougill, Andrew J. Thierfelder, Christian Article/Letter to editor Land Degradation and Development 32 (2021) 4 ISSN: 1085-3278 Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi 2021 The challenges of land degradation, climate change and food insecurity have led to the introduction of conservation agriculture (CA) aimed at enhancing yield and soil quality. Despite positive biophysical results, low adoption rates have been the focus of studies identifying constraints to wider uptake. While the adoption framework is popular for measuring agricultural innovation, objective adoption measurements remain problematic and do not recognize the contextual and dynamic decision-making process. This study uses a technographic and participatory approach to move beyond the adoption framework and understand: (a) how agricultural decision-making takes place including the knowledge construction, (b) how agriculture is performed in a context of project intervention and (c) how practice adaptation plays out in the context of interacting knowledge. Findings confirm that farmer decision-making is dynamic, multidimensional and contextual. The common innovation diffusion model uses a theory of change, showcasing benefits through training lead farmers as community advocates and demonstration trials. Our study shows that the assumed model of technology transfer with reference to climate-smart agriculture interventions is not as linear and effective as assumed previously. We introduce four lenses that contribute to better understanding complex innovation dynamics: (a) social dynamics and information transfer, (b) contextual costs and benefits, (c) experience and risk aversion, and (d) practice adaptation. Investments should build on existing knowledge and farming systems including a focus on the dynamic decision process to support the 'scaling up, scaling out and scaling deep' agenda for sustainable agricultural innovations. en text/html https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-should-rethink-adoption-in-agricultural-innovation-empiric 10.1002/ldr.3833 https://edepot.wur.nl/588008 Malawi climate-smart agriculture conservation agriculture no-tillage scaling southern Africa https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Malawi
climate-smart agriculture
conservation agriculture
no-tillage
scaling
southern Africa
Malawi
climate-smart agriculture
conservation agriculture
no-tillage
scaling
southern Africa
spellingShingle Malawi
climate-smart agriculture
conservation agriculture
no-tillage
scaling
southern Africa
Malawi
climate-smart agriculture
conservation agriculture
no-tillage
scaling
southern Africa
Hermans, Thirze D.G.
Whitfield, Stephen
Dougill, Andrew J.
Thierfelder, Christian
Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
description The challenges of land degradation, climate change and food insecurity have led to the introduction of conservation agriculture (CA) aimed at enhancing yield and soil quality. Despite positive biophysical results, low adoption rates have been the focus of studies identifying constraints to wider uptake. While the adoption framework is popular for measuring agricultural innovation, objective adoption measurements remain problematic and do not recognize the contextual and dynamic decision-making process. This study uses a technographic and participatory approach to move beyond the adoption framework and understand: (a) how agricultural decision-making takes place including the knowledge construction, (b) how agriculture is performed in a context of project intervention and (c) how practice adaptation plays out in the context of interacting knowledge. Findings confirm that farmer decision-making is dynamic, multidimensional and contextual. The common innovation diffusion model uses a theory of change, showcasing benefits through training lead farmers as community advocates and demonstration trials. Our study shows that the assumed model of technology transfer with reference to climate-smart agriculture interventions is not as linear and effective as assumed previously. We introduce four lenses that contribute to better understanding complex innovation dynamics: (a) social dynamics and information transfer, (b) contextual costs and benefits, (c) experience and risk aversion, and (d) practice adaptation. Investments should build on existing knowledge and farming systems including a focus on the dynamic decision process to support the 'scaling up, scaling out and scaling deep' agenda for sustainable agricultural innovations.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Malawi
climate-smart agriculture
conservation agriculture
no-tillage
scaling
southern Africa
author Hermans, Thirze D.G.
Whitfield, Stephen
Dougill, Andrew J.
Thierfelder, Christian
author_facet Hermans, Thirze D.G.
Whitfield, Stephen
Dougill, Andrew J.
Thierfelder, Christian
author_sort Hermans, Thirze D.G.
title Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
title_short Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
title_full Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
title_fullStr Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : Empirical insights from Malawi
title_sort why we should rethink ‘adoption’ in agricultural innovation : empirical insights from malawi
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-we-should-rethink-adoption-in-agricultural-innovation-empiric
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