A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment

CONTEXT: The publication of farm (or farmer) typologies has increased over recent years. The purpose of these studies is usually to differentiate groups of farmers so that they are “targeted” with specific agricultural innovations, or best-bet interventions can be “prioritised”. The degree to which...

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Autores principales: Manners, Rhys, Hammond, James, Umugabe, David Renaud, Sibomana, Milindi, Schut, Marc
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172460
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author Manners, Rhys
Hammond, James
Umugabe, David Renaud
Sibomana, Milindi
Schut, Marc
author_browse Hammond, James
Manners, Rhys
Schut, Marc
Sibomana, Milindi
Umugabe, David Renaud
author_facet Manners, Rhys
Hammond, James
Umugabe, David Renaud
Sibomana, Milindi
Schut, Marc
author_sort Manners, Rhys
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description CONTEXT: The publication of farm (or farmer) typologies has increased over recent years. The purpose of these studies is usually to differentiate groups of farmers so that they are “targeted” with specific agricultural innovations, or best-bet interventions can be “prioritised”. The degree to which such typologies actually influence development practice is however unclear, and little has been published on that topic. OBJECTIVE: The paper aims to move narratives and practices around farm typologies from theoretical to applied and present a novel methodology for typology validation. We worked with a large-scale development organisation to develop a typology for their use, and report here on the process of enabling the organisation to make use of the typology. The lessons from this process are intended to inform the use of farm typologies in agricultural development work. METHODS: A typology of farming households was derived from a household survey in Rwanda (previously published), in partnership with a large-scale agricultural development organisation. Responding to the organisation's requests, the researchers created a decision tree tool to rapidly assign households to types; conducted validation exercises to establish confidence in the typology and the decision tree (making adaptations as needed). Validation was with farmers and extensionists and included developing key word and pictorial representations of farm types which were compared against the empirical typology. The decision tree was tested and questions adapted to maximise accuracy. The organisation then used the tools for a period of two years. Finally, the researchers interviewed representatives of the organisation to find out how the tools had been used. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The typology validation exercises showed a high level of agreement between farmers and extensionists, and a moderate level of agreement between the empirical typology and the types defined by farmers and extensionists. There was a low level of agreement in the Western province of Rwanda, where the socio-economic situation was radically different to other areas, which had not been accounted for in the empirical typology definition. Establishing the correct questions in the decision tree tool proved important. The organisation reduced the number of farm types, and categorised over 350,000 households, with four use cases developed for the farm typologies: planning for the recruitment of clients (farming households are referred to as clients by the organisation), client needs assessment, intervention adoption rate assessment, and monitoring of farmers along the organisation's conception of their (farmers') journey to prosperity. SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides lessons on what is required for the application of farm typologies by development organisations.
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spelling CGSpace1724602025-12-08T10:11:39Z A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment Manners, Rhys Hammond, James Umugabe, David Renaud Sibomana, Milindi Schut, Marc farm typologies systems analysis decision support sustainable intensification mixed farming CONTEXT: The publication of farm (or farmer) typologies has increased over recent years. The purpose of these studies is usually to differentiate groups of farmers so that they are “targeted” with specific agricultural innovations, or best-bet interventions can be “prioritised”. The degree to which such typologies actually influence development practice is however unclear, and little has been published on that topic. OBJECTIVE: The paper aims to move narratives and practices around farm typologies from theoretical to applied and present a novel methodology for typology validation. We worked with a large-scale development organisation to develop a typology for their use, and report here on the process of enabling the organisation to make use of the typology. The lessons from this process are intended to inform the use of farm typologies in agricultural development work. METHODS: A typology of farming households was derived from a household survey in Rwanda (previously published), in partnership with a large-scale agricultural development organisation. Responding to the organisation's requests, the researchers created a decision tree tool to rapidly assign households to types; conducted validation exercises to establish confidence in the typology and the decision tree (making adaptations as needed). Validation was with farmers and extensionists and included developing key word and pictorial representations of farm types which were compared against the empirical typology. The decision tree was tested and questions adapted to maximise accuracy. The organisation then used the tools for a period of two years. Finally, the researchers interviewed representatives of the organisation to find out how the tools had been used. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The typology validation exercises showed a high level of agreement between farmers and extensionists, and a moderate level of agreement between the empirical typology and the types defined by farmers and extensionists. There was a low level of agreement in the Western province of Rwanda, where the socio-economic situation was radically different to other areas, which had not been accounted for in the empirical typology definition. Establishing the correct questions in the decision tree tool proved important. The organisation reduced the number of farm types, and categorised over 350,000 households, with four use cases developed for the farm typologies: planning for the recruitment of clients (farming households are referred to as clients by the organisation), client needs assessment, intervention adoption rate assessment, and monitoring of farmers along the organisation's conception of their (farmers') journey to prosperity. SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides lessons on what is required for the application of farm typologies by development organisations. 2025-03 2025-01-29T22:11:12Z 2025-01-29T22:11:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172460 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Manners, R., Hammond, J., Umugabe, D.R., Sibomana, M., Schut, M. 2025. A farm typology development cycle: from empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment. Agricultural Systems, 224, 104250, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2024.104250.
spellingShingle farm typologies
systems analysis
decision support
sustainable intensification
mixed farming
Manners, Rhys
Hammond, James
Umugabe, David Renaud
Sibomana, Milindi
Schut, Marc
A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title_full A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title_fullStr A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title_full_unstemmed A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title_short A farm typology development cycle: From empirical development through validation, to large-scale organisational deployment
title_sort farm typology development cycle from empirical development through validation to large scale organisational deployment
topic farm typologies
systems analysis
decision support
sustainable intensification
mixed farming
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172460
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