Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana

AICCRA in collaboration with IFPRI and the University of Development Studies conducted an evaluation of the impact of access and use of tailored and targeted climate information service (CIS) on men and women empowerment in Ghana. This was collaborative research across all countries where the Accel...

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Autor principal: Damba, O. T.
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138055
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author Damba, O. T.
author_browse Damba, O. T.
author_facet Damba, O. T.
author_sort Damba, O. T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description AICCRA in collaboration with IFPRI and the University of Development Studies conducted an evaluation of the impact of access and use of tailored and targeted climate information service (CIS) on men and women empowerment in Ghana. This was collaborative research across all countries where the Accelerating the Impact of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa (AICCRA). Data was collected at both the individual and household level. In all, a total of 630 respondents were interviewed on household and individual level information on the relationship between climate shocks, bundled climate services and women empowerment in six (6) regions of Ghana. The study used the Pro-WEAI indicators and was based on a two-year recall basis and the existing climate information services. Questions comprising of: 1) How do climate shocks influence women’s empowerment, including control over income, time use, and agency in household decision-making? 2) What are differential gender impacts of CIS packages on these empowerment indicators? 3) Does value addition via bundling CIS with other climate smart agricultural (CSA) services increase climate resilience for women and men? The questionnaire will be administered to both male and female decision makers in the household. This survey built on the AICCRA-Ghana cluster baseline and identified and listed the respondents from an initial 630 targeted respondents but achieved 551 respondents. Based on this, non-listed respondents were identified and captured to complete the targeted sample size. Findings from the study is published in Frontiers Sustainable Food Systems titled Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace138055
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
publisherStr Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
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spelling CGSpace1380552025-12-08T09:54:28Z Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana Damba, O. T. climate change climate resilience food systems AICCRA in collaboration with IFPRI and the University of Development Studies conducted an evaluation of the impact of access and use of tailored and targeted climate information service (CIS) on men and women empowerment in Ghana. This was collaborative research across all countries where the Accelerating the Impact of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa (AICCRA). Data was collected at both the individual and household level. In all, a total of 630 respondents were interviewed on household and individual level information on the relationship between climate shocks, bundled climate services and women empowerment in six (6) regions of Ghana. The study used the Pro-WEAI indicators and was based on a two-year recall basis and the existing climate information services. Questions comprising of: 1) How do climate shocks influence women’s empowerment, including control over income, time use, and agency in household decision-making? 2) What are differential gender impacts of CIS packages on these empowerment indicators? 3) Does value addition via bundling CIS with other climate smart agricultural (CSA) services increase climate resilience for women and men? The questionnaire will be administered to both male and female decision makers in the household. This survey built on the AICCRA-Ghana cluster baseline and identified and listed the respondents from an initial 630 targeted respondents but achieved 551 respondents. Based on this, non-listed respondents were identified and captured to complete the targeted sample size. Findings from the study is published in Frontiers Sustainable Food Systems titled Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana 2023-12 2024-01-18T20:17:27Z 2024-01-18T20:17:27Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138055 en Open Access application/pdf Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa Damba, O. T. 2023. Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana. AICCRA Report. Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa (AICCRA).
spellingShingle climate change
climate resilience
food systems
Damba, O. T.
Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title_full Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title_fullStr Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title_short Estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers’ resilience in Ghana
title_sort estimating the intrahousehold costs and benefits of innovations to enhance smallholder farmers resilience in ghana
topic climate change
climate resilience
food systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138055
work_keys_str_mv AT dambaot estimatingtheintrahouseholdcostsandbenefitsofinnovationstoenhancesmallholderfarmersresilienceinghana