Similar Items: Lifting quality constraints to agricultural technology adoption in the Ugandan market for maize seed
- Lifting quality constraints to agricultural technology adoption in the Ugandan market for maize seed
- The (perceived) quality of agricultural technology and its adoption: Experimental evidence from Uganda
- How misinformation and mismatched expectations reduce adoption of improved seeds
- Stimulating agricultural technology adoption lessons from fertilizer use among Ugandan potato farmers
- Miracle seeds: Biased expectations, complementary input use, and the dynamics of smallholder technology adoption
- Miracle seeds: Biased expectations, complementary input use, and the dynamics of smallholder technology adoption
Author: Miehe, Caroline
- Does bottom-up monitoring improve public services? What we found in Uganda
- Community based monitoring and public service delivery: Impact, and the role of information, deliberation, and jurisdictional tier
- Lifting quality constraints to agricultural technology adoption in the Ugandan market for maize seed
- Miracle seeds: Biased expectations, complementary input use, and the dynamics of smallholder technology adoption
- Gender bias in customer perceptions: The case of agro-input dealers in Uganda
- Community-based monitoring and accountability forums and public service delivery in Uganda: Impact and the role of information, deliberation, and administrative placement
Author: Van Campenhout, Bjorn
- TH4.2: Methodologies for researching feminization of agriculture processes: what do they tell us? A journal paper (in progress)
- There is an app for that? The impact of community knowledge workers in Uganda
- Information and communications technology (ICT) and agricultural extension in developing countries
- Integrating consumer traits is key to increasing uptake of improved crop varieties: Evidence and policy insights from seed sample packs and cooking events in Uganda
- Sharing common resources in patriarchal and status-based societies: Evidence from Tanzania
- Does bottom-up monitoring improve public services? What we found in Uganda