No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras

This thesis advances our understanding of what it means to establish participatory climate services for small- scale farmers on the ground in two main and contrasting agricultural systems—coffee and staple grains. Employing a mixed-methods approach that integrated participatory tools, farmer questio...

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Autor principal: Giraldo Mendez, Diana
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163024
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author Giraldo Mendez, Diana
author_browse Giraldo Mendez, Diana
author_facet Giraldo Mendez, Diana
author_sort Giraldo Mendez, Diana
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This thesis advances our understanding of what it means to establish participatory climate services for small- scale farmers on the ground in two main and contrasting agricultural systems—coffee and staple grains. Employing a mixed-methods approach that integrated participatory tools, farmer questionnaires, focus groups, in-depth interviews with farmers, and various actors in a case study, the research found that placing the farmer at the core the climate services development encouraged them to make their own decisions based on the analysis of information and their needs (98%, n = 209 famers in the Dry Corridor in Honduras), shifting away from the traditional top-down approach. This helped to establish an evaluation framework that supports the long-term sustainability of this service through a multi-stakeholder network involving at least 279 institutions across various levels and with diverse roles in four countries in Latin America. Collectively, the elements of this thesis contribute to a wider discourse on the factors influencing the success of climate services in terms of effectiveness, sustainability, and scalability, as well as a deeper comprehension of what determines "farmer participation" in climate services. The thesis also synthesizes an extensive body of systematic literature that has emerged within the climate service for agriculture domain over the past decade, augmenting our overall understanding of the nature of climate services, their evolution, and the existing gaps and challenges. The framework developed in this research is a valuable tool for advancing climate services research and informing the design and evaluation of interventions that cater to farmers' specific needs. Emphasizing participatory engagement and diverse representation has fostered a robust governance framework that strengthens rural development and resilience at the community level.
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spelling CGSpace1630242025-11-05T12:33:23Z No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras Giraldo Mendez, Diana evaluation beans coffee maize climate services network analysis farming systems-farming participatory action research farmer participation This thesis advances our understanding of what it means to establish participatory climate services for small- scale farmers on the ground in two main and contrasting agricultural systems—coffee and staple grains. Employing a mixed-methods approach that integrated participatory tools, farmer questionnaires, focus groups, in-depth interviews with farmers, and various actors in a case study, the research found that placing the farmer at the core the climate services development encouraged them to make their own decisions based on the analysis of information and their needs (98%, n = 209 famers in the Dry Corridor in Honduras), shifting away from the traditional top-down approach. This helped to establish an evaluation framework that supports the long-term sustainability of this service through a multi-stakeholder network involving at least 279 institutions across various levels and with diverse roles in four countries in Latin America. Collectively, the elements of this thesis contribute to a wider discourse on the factors influencing the success of climate services in terms of effectiveness, sustainability, and scalability, as well as a deeper comprehension of what determines "farmer participation" in climate services. The thesis also synthesizes an extensive body of systematic literature that has emerged within the climate service for agriculture domain over the past decade, augmenting our overall understanding of the nature of climate services, their evolution, and the existing gaps and challenges. The framework developed in this research is a valuable tool for advancing climate services research and informing the design and evaluation of interventions that cater to farmers' specific needs. Emphasizing participatory engagement and diverse representation has fostered a robust governance framework that strengthens rural development and resilience at the community level. 2023 2024-12-04T10:28:10Z 2024-12-04T10:28:10Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163024 en Open Access application/pdf Giraldo Mendez, D. (2023) No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras. [Thesis] University of Reading. 312 p.
spellingShingle evaluation
beans
coffee
maize
climate services
network analysis
farming systems-farming
participatory action research
farmer participation
Giraldo Mendez, Diana
No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title_full No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title_fullStr No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title_full_unstemmed No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title_short No farmer is an Island: Mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around Honduras
title_sort no farmer is an island mechanisms behind successful climate services in and around honduras
topic evaluation
beans
coffee
maize
climate services
network analysis
farming systems-farming
participatory action research
farmer participation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163024
work_keys_str_mv AT giraldomendezdiana nofarmerisanislandmechanismsbehindsuccessfulclimateservicesinandaroundhonduras