Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia

Limited adoption of agricultural technologies such as improved crop varieties has been a challenge for increasing crop productivity in low-income countries. We study drivers of varietal turnover by conducting gender-disaggregated focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews with teff and w...

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Autores principales: Yami, Mastewal, Cavicchioli, Martina, Abate, Gashaw T., Kramer, Berber
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159546
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author Yami, Mastewal
Cavicchioli, Martina
Abate, Gashaw T.
Kramer, Berber
author_browse Abate, Gashaw T.
Cavicchioli, Martina
Kramer, Berber
Yami, Mastewal
author_facet Yami, Mastewal
Cavicchioli, Martina
Abate, Gashaw T.
Kramer, Berber
author_sort Yami, Mastewal
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Limited adoption of agricultural technologies such as improved crop varieties has been a challenge for increasing crop productivity in low-income countries. We study drivers of varietal turnover by conducting gender-disaggregated focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews with teff and wheat farmers, and key informant interviews with public and private seed actors, in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. We find that attributes specific not only to production and sales, but also to processing and consumption (such as color, texture, moisture, and taste) are key drivers for varietal uptake among both men and women farmers. In relative terms, processing and consumption attributes are more important to women than men farmers. Gender and social status are usually linked to access to resources (such as inputs or information about newly released varieties) that could become an important driver of uptake. Women’s and men’s prior experiences with improved varieties also influence adoption. For instance, farmers that experience crop losses when using new varieties during a drought reportedly become more risk averse in future decisions to adopt new improved varieties. Overall, the findings imply the need to adopt seed development and marketing strategies that pay close attention to the preferences of both producers and consumers, such as considering the importance of consumption attributes (e.g., not altering local recipes) and encouraging farmers to first experiment with new varieties on parts of their plots before adopting at scale or providing a risk management tool (e.g., insurance) that can protect farmers from potential risks associated with new technologies.
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spelling CGSpace1595462025-12-02T21:02:41Z Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia Yami, Mastewal Cavicchioli, Martina Abate, Gashaw T. Kramer, Berber gender social inclusion teff wheat Limited adoption of agricultural technologies such as improved crop varieties has been a challenge for increasing crop productivity in low-income countries. We study drivers of varietal turnover by conducting gender-disaggregated focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews with teff and wheat farmers, and key informant interviews with public and private seed actors, in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. We find that attributes specific not only to production and sales, but also to processing and consumption (such as color, texture, moisture, and taste) are key drivers for varietal uptake among both men and women farmers. In relative terms, processing and consumption attributes are more important to women than men farmers. Gender and social status are usually linked to access to resources (such as inputs or information about newly released varieties) that could become an important driver of uptake. Women’s and men’s prior experiences with improved varieties also influence adoption. For instance, farmers that experience crop losses when using new varieties during a drought reportedly become more risk averse in future decisions to adopt new improved varieties. Overall, the findings imply the need to adopt seed development and marketing strategies that pay close attention to the preferences of both producers and consumers, such as considering the importance of consumption attributes (e.g., not altering local recipes) and encouraging farmers to first experiment with new varieties on parts of their plots before adopting at scale or providing a risk management tool (e.g., insurance) that can protect farmers from potential risks associated with new technologies. 2024-11-11 2024-11-11T21:43:49Z 2024-11-11T21:43:49Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159546 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128118 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130294 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Yami, Mastewal; Cavicchioli, Martina; Abate, Gashaw T.; and Kramer, Berber. 2024. Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2292. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159546
spellingShingle gender
social inclusion
teff
wheat
Yami, Mastewal
Cavicchioli, Martina
Abate, Gashaw T.
Kramer, Berber
Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title_full Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title_short Gendered drivers of varietal turnover: A qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in Ethiopia
title_sort gendered drivers of varietal turnover a qualitative assessment for improved teff and wheat varieties in ethiopia
topic gender
social inclusion
teff
wheat
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159546
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AT abategashawt gendereddriversofvarietalturnoveraqualitativeassessmentforimprovedteffandwheatvarietiesinethiopia
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