Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda

March 2024 | Baseline Assessment Report 1 1. Introduction 1.1 Background The agricultural sector is still the main livelihood for the majority of the Ugandan populace. According to the main development blueprint for the country, Uganda’s Vision 2040, agriculture is expected to play a critical ro...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lengewa, Catherin, Mikhala, Audrine, Aura, Sylvester, Amuda, Alex, Yila, Jummai, Nchanji, Eileen, Bomuhangi, Allan
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144007
_version_ 1855538578972475392
author Lengewa, Catherin
Mikhala, Audrine
Aura, Sylvester
Amuda, Alex
Yila, Jummai
Nchanji, Eileen
Bomuhangi, Allan
author_browse Amuda, Alex
Aura, Sylvester
Bomuhangi, Allan
Lengewa, Catherin
Mikhala, Audrine
Nchanji, Eileen
Yila, Jummai
author_facet Lengewa, Catherin
Mikhala, Audrine
Aura, Sylvester
Amuda, Alex
Yila, Jummai
Nchanji, Eileen
Bomuhangi, Allan
author_sort Lengewa, Catherin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description March 2024 | Baseline Assessment Report 1 1. Introduction 1.1 Background The agricultural sector is still the main livelihood for the majority of the Ugandan populace. According to the main development blueprint for the country, Uganda’s Vision 2040, agriculture is expected to play a critical role in transforming the economy from a predominantly peasant and low-income country to a competitive upper-middle-income country by 2040. Agriculture is envisaged to significantly contribute to the gross domestic product and is a crucial source of employment and income. Uganda’s agricultural sector generates roughly one-quarter of the GDP, employs 70% of the labor force, and accounts for about half of the national land area (UBOS 2016)1. The farming system in Uganda is dominated by smallholder producers owning an average of less than 2 acres of farmland, accounting for 90% of the total farming community (Background Note: Uganda, 20152). Uganda has relatively good agro-climatic conditions with bi-modal rainfall patterns in most parts of the country, and its land and water resources are amongst the best in Africa (CCAFS 2017)3. However, agricultural production in Uganda operates at less than 40% of its attainable potential for key staple crops (Kraybill et al., 2012). Adopting modern agricultural technologies can increase yields, and access to quality inputs is still a challenge, leaving farmers vulnerable to adverse weather conditions (IGC, 2017)4. The CGIAR’s Seed Equal Work Package 6, led by IRRI, seeks to address the challenge of equitable seed access. It supports the delivery of seeds of improved, climate-resilient, market-preferred, and nutritious varieties of priority crops. It aims to provide a high rate of genetic gain to farmers while also ensuring equitable access by women and other disadvantaged groups. IRRI has partnered with CBCC to design and implement a project to address the challenges of equitable access to climate-resilient, market-preferred, and nutritious varieties of beans and rice in Eastern Uganda. The project aims to customize a strategy and equitable seeds access intervention model for Uganda.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace144007
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1440072025-11-05T12:34:40Z Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda Lengewa, Catherin Mikhala, Audrine Aura, Sylvester Amuda, Alex Yila, Jummai Nchanji, Eileen Bomuhangi, Allan seed systems information systems enterprises farmers' attitudes March 2024 | Baseline Assessment Report 1 1. Introduction 1.1 Background The agricultural sector is still the main livelihood for the majority of the Ugandan populace. According to the main development blueprint for the country, Uganda’s Vision 2040, agriculture is expected to play a critical role in transforming the economy from a predominantly peasant and low-income country to a competitive upper-middle-income country by 2040. Agriculture is envisaged to significantly contribute to the gross domestic product and is a crucial source of employment and income. Uganda’s agricultural sector generates roughly one-quarter of the GDP, employs 70% of the labor force, and accounts for about half of the national land area (UBOS 2016)1. The farming system in Uganda is dominated by smallholder producers owning an average of less than 2 acres of farmland, accounting for 90% of the total farming community (Background Note: Uganda, 20152). Uganda has relatively good agro-climatic conditions with bi-modal rainfall patterns in most parts of the country, and its land and water resources are amongst the best in Africa (CCAFS 2017)3. However, agricultural production in Uganda operates at less than 40% of its attainable potential for key staple crops (Kraybill et al., 2012). Adopting modern agricultural technologies can increase yields, and access to quality inputs is still a challenge, leaving farmers vulnerable to adverse weather conditions (IGC, 2017)4. The CGIAR’s Seed Equal Work Package 6, led by IRRI, seeks to address the challenge of equitable seed access. It supports the delivery of seeds of improved, climate-resilient, market-preferred, and nutritious varieties of priority crops. It aims to provide a high rate of genetic gain to farmers while also ensuring equitable access by women and other disadvantaged groups. IRRI has partnered with CBCC to design and implement a project to address the challenges of equitable access to climate-resilient, market-preferred, and nutritious varieties of beans and rice in Eastern Uganda. The project aims to customize a strategy and equitable seeds access intervention model for Uganda. 2024-05-10 2024-05-23T05:20:55Z 2024-05-23T05:20:55Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144007 en Open Access application/pdf Lengewa, C.; Mikhala, A.; Aura, S.; Amuda, A.; Yila, J.; Nchanji, E.; Bomuhangi, A. (2024) Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda. CGIAR initative on Seed Equal Progress Report. 16 p.
spellingShingle seed systems
information systems
enterprises
farmers' attitudes
Lengewa, Catherin
Mikhala, Audrine
Aura, Sylvester
Amuda, Alex
Yila, Jummai
Nchanji, Eileen
Bomuhangi, Allan
Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title_full Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title_fullStr Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title_short Understanding knowledge, attitudes, and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in Butaleja Eastern Uganda
title_sort understanding knowledge attitudes and practices among smallholder women and youth farmers in relation to seed information and entrepreneurship in butaleja eastern uganda
topic seed systems
information systems
enterprises
farmers' attitudes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144007
work_keys_str_mv AT lengewacatherin understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT mikhalaaudrine understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT aurasylvester understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT amudaalex understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT yilajummai understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT nchanjieileen understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda
AT bomuhangiallan understandingknowledgeattitudesandpracticesamongsmallholderwomenandyouthfarmersinrelationtoseedinformationandentrepreneurshipinbutalejaeasternuganda