Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?

Reducing Malawi's persistent food insecurity requires increased and sustainable agricultural productivity despite worsening climate shocks and soil degradation. This study focuses on social capital as a catalyst for the uptake of Conservation Agriculture (CA), a sustainable cropping technique that c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mathanda, H., Pangapanga-Phiri, I., Hirpa Tufa, A., Mangisoni, J., Alene, A., Chikoye, D.
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168619
_version_ 1855513038552039424
author Mathanda, H.
Pangapanga-Phiri, I.
Hirpa Tufa, A.
Mangisoni, J.
Alene, A.
Chikoye, D.
author_browse Alene, A.
Chikoye, D.
Hirpa Tufa, A.
Mangisoni, J.
Mathanda, H.
Pangapanga-Phiri, I.
author_facet Mathanda, H.
Pangapanga-Phiri, I.
Hirpa Tufa, A.
Mangisoni, J.
Alene, A.
Chikoye, D.
author_sort Mathanda, H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Reducing Malawi's persistent food insecurity requires increased and sustainable agricultural productivity despite worsening climate shocks and soil degradation. This study focuses on social capital as a catalyst for the uptake of Conservation Agriculture (CA), a sustainable cropping technique that can address these problems. Despite several initiatives from NGOs and the Malawian government, as well as scientific data supporting CA, adoption rates remain below expectations. The study used secondary data collected by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT) under ‘Understanding and Enhancing the Adoption of Conservation Agriculture in Smallholder Farming Systems of Southern Africa (ACASA) Project’ from 1,512 households sampled randomly. The main objective of this research was to examine how social capital components interact to influence farmers’ decisions in adoption of CA practices using the Negative Binomial Regression Model (NBRM). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was conducted on social capital elements to derive social capital dimensions. Results show that group membership and relations to leadership positively influenced the adoption of CA. Furthermore, cultivated land, extension services, livestock ownership, and access to credit had a positive influence on the number of CA practices adopted. Although the effect on full CA adoption is minimal compared to partial adoption, results demonstrate favorable trends toward full CA adoption. We also used Seemingly Unrelated Regressions (SUR) to investigate determinants of participation in social networks. Findings show that the number of training a farmer receives is the main determinant across all dimensions of social capital. The results underscore the importance of implementing policies that encourage cooperation and community involvement to strengthen social networks to improve CA uptake.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace168619
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1686192025-01-24T08:53:21Z Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi? Mathanda, H. Pangapanga-Phiri, I. Hirpa Tufa, A. Mangisoni, J. Alene, A. Chikoye, D. conservation agriculture adoption smallholder farmers social capital malawi Reducing Malawi's persistent food insecurity requires increased and sustainable agricultural productivity despite worsening climate shocks and soil degradation. This study focuses on social capital as a catalyst for the uptake of Conservation Agriculture (CA), a sustainable cropping technique that can address these problems. Despite several initiatives from NGOs and the Malawian government, as well as scientific data supporting CA, adoption rates remain below expectations. The study used secondary data collected by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT) under ‘Understanding and Enhancing the Adoption of Conservation Agriculture in Smallholder Farming Systems of Southern Africa (ACASA) Project’ from 1,512 households sampled randomly. The main objective of this research was to examine how social capital components interact to influence farmers’ decisions in adoption of CA practices using the Negative Binomial Regression Model (NBRM). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was conducted on social capital elements to derive social capital dimensions. Results show that group membership and relations to leadership positively influenced the adoption of CA. Furthermore, cultivated land, extension services, livestock ownership, and access to credit had a positive influence on the number of CA practices adopted. Although the effect on full CA adoption is minimal compared to partial adoption, results demonstrate favorable trends toward full CA adoption. We also used Seemingly Unrelated Regressions (SUR) to investigate determinants of participation in social networks. Findings show that the number of training a farmer receives is the main determinant across all dimensions of social capital. The results underscore the importance of implementing policies that encourage cooperation and community involvement to strengthen social networks to improve CA uptake. 2024-12 2025-01-07T09:49:35Z 2025-01-07T09:49:35Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168619 en Open Access application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Mathanda, H., Pangapanga-Phiri, I., Hirpa Tufa, A., Mangisoni, J., Alene, A. & Chikoye, D. (2024). Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi? Lilongwe, Malawi: IITA. (25 p.).
spellingShingle conservation agriculture
adoption
smallholder farmers
social capital
malawi
Mathanda, H.
Pangapanga-Phiri, I.
Hirpa Tufa, A.
Mangisoni, J.
Alene, A.
Chikoye, D.
Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title_full Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title_fullStr Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title_full_unstemmed Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title_short Does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in Malawi?
title_sort does social capital influence adoption of conservation agriculture among smallholder farmers in malawi
topic conservation agriculture
adoption
smallholder farmers
social capital
malawi
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168619
work_keys_str_mv AT mathandah doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi
AT pangapangaphirii doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi
AT hirpatufaa doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi
AT mangisonij doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi
AT alenea doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi
AT chikoyed doessocialcapitalinfluenceadoptionofconservationagricultureamongsmallholderfarmersinmalawi