Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana

This paper assessed the conditions contributing to the success of smallholder farmer groups in northern Ghana using mechanical maize shellers (MMS) based on a collective business model. A sample of 156 farmers from 18 intervention communities was analyzed using qualitative comparative analysis (QCA)...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ansah, I.G.K., Kotu, B.H., Boyubie, B., Bonney, J.E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139872
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author Ansah, I.G.K.
Kotu, B.H.
Boyubie, B.
Bonney, J.E.
author_browse Ansah, I.G.K.
Bonney, J.E.
Boyubie, B.
Kotu, B.H.
author_facet Ansah, I.G.K.
Kotu, B.H.
Boyubie, B.
Bonney, J.E.
author_sort Ansah, I.G.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper assessed the conditions contributing to the success of smallholder farmer groups in northern Ghana using mechanical maize shellers (MMS) based on a collective business model. A sample of 156 farmers from 18 intervention communities was analyzed using qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to examine the conditions necessary to increase usage of MMS. The results revealed a single configuration for achieving high group MMS usage, observed in about 24 percent of the cases. This configuration comprises five sufficient conditions: high cooperation, good relationships among members, payment of financial contributions, provision of prior notice for group meetings, and obedience to group rules. Additionally, two necessary conditions identified were low conflict and reduced use of manual maize shelling. When these core conditions coexist within the farmer groups, the MMS is more likely to be highly utilized. These findings suggest that group leaders and members should encourage mutual understanding, respect individual differences, value diverse opinions, and share responsibilities to improve cooperation, foster better relationships, and reduce conflicts among members. This approach can encourage both existing and new members to utilize the services of mechanical sheller groups, ensuring sustainability. Future research should utilize alternative econometric procedures to evaluate the configurations identified by the QCA analysis, aiming to enhance the reliability and confidence of empirical findings.
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spelling CGSpace1398722025-12-08T10:29:22Z Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana Ansah, I.G.K. Kotu, B.H. Boyubie, B. Bonney, J.E. maize shellers comparative analysis farming systems food security ghana This paper assessed the conditions contributing to the success of smallholder farmer groups in northern Ghana using mechanical maize shellers (MMS) based on a collective business model. A sample of 156 farmers from 18 intervention communities was analyzed using qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to examine the conditions necessary to increase usage of MMS. The results revealed a single configuration for achieving high group MMS usage, observed in about 24 percent of the cases. This configuration comprises five sufficient conditions: high cooperation, good relationships among members, payment of financial contributions, provision of prior notice for group meetings, and obedience to group rules. Additionally, two necessary conditions identified were low conflict and reduced use of manual maize shelling. When these core conditions coexist within the farmer groups, the MMS is more likely to be highly utilized. These findings suggest that group leaders and members should encourage mutual understanding, respect individual differences, value diverse opinions, and share responsibilities to improve cooperation, foster better relationships, and reduce conflicts among members. This approach can encourage both existing and new members to utilize the services of mechanical sheller groups, ensuring sustainability. Future research should utilize alternative econometric procedures to evaluate the configurations identified by the QCA analysis, aiming to enhance the reliability and confidence of empirical findings. 2024 2024-03-08T11:56:02Z 2024-03-08T11:56:02Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139872 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Ansah, I.G.K., Kotu, B.H., Boyubie, B. & Bonney, J. E. (2024). Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of northern Ghana. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 7: 1228382, 1-11.
spellingShingle maize
shellers
comparative analysis
farming systems
food security
ghana
Ansah, I.G.K.
Kotu, B.H.
Boyubie, B.
Bonney, J.E.
Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title_full Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title_fullStr Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title_short Enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model: the case of Northern Ghana
title_sort enhancing smallholder maize shelling mechanization through the collective business model the case of northern ghana
topic maize
shellers
comparative analysis
farming systems
food security
ghana
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139872
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