Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems

The transition toward sustainable livestock systems is crucial for mitigating global warming and meeting the growing demand for food, particularly in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), where rural areas face significant economic and social challenges. Sustainable practices such as pasture manage...

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Autores principales: Sandoval, Danny, Burkart, Stefan, van der Hoek, Rein, Chandler, Mark, Tabora, Carlos
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177225
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author Sandoval, Danny
Burkart, Stefan
van der Hoek, Rein
Chandler, Mark
Tabora, Carlos
author_browse Burkart, Stefan
Chandler, Mark
Sandoval, Danny
Tabora, Carlos
van der Hoek, Rein
author_facet Sandoval, Danny
Burkart, Stefan
van der Hoek, Rein
Chandler, Mark
Tabora, Carlos
author_sort Sandoval, Danny
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The transition toward sustainable livestock systems is crucial for mitigating global warming and meeting the growing demand for food, particularly in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), where rural areas face significant economic and social challenges. Sustainable practices such as pasture management, silvopastoral integration, efficient water use, and balanced livestock feeding contribute to environmentally responsible production, animal welfare, and climate resilience. Honduras represents a critical case where livestock farming, while central to the agricultural economy, is associated with deforestation, land grabbing, biodiversity loss, and social inequalities. This study analysed 450 producers across four municipalities in Olancho to understand the adoption dynamics of sustainable livestock practices promoted by Heifer International through Field Schools. Using descriptive analysis and an adoption model, the study constructed adoption profiles to better understand transition processes and identify key influencing factors. Results show that project participation, producer age, and environmental interest significantly affect the likelihood of adopting sustainable practices. Adoption levels varied according to the number and types of practices implemented, revealing the most accepted technologies and combinations among producers. Gender differences were notable: 54 % of women were classified as non-adopters compared to 39 % of men, and only 13 women reached the highest adoption level versus 39 men. The econometric analysis confirmed that being male significantly increases the probability of adoption. These findings highlight barriers faced by women, including limited access to technical assistance, information networks, financing, and productive resources. Although women and men share similar educational levels, women are more often linked to smaller farms and have lower participation in agricultural networks. Despite a high perception of participation in development initiatives, women showed lower uptake of sustainable livestock practices. The study emphasises that adoption is a gradual process, involving experimentation and combination of technologies, rather than a discrete shift. These insights provide crucial guidance for policymakers seeking to foster inclusive and sustainable livestock transitions in LAC countries facing comparable challenges.
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spelling CGSpace1772252025-12-02T10:59:51Z Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems Sandoval, Danny Burkart, Stefan van der Hoek, Rein Chandler, Mark Tabora, Carlos evaluation innovation adoption gender analysis análisis de género farmer participation sustainable production producción sostenible participación de agricultores adopción de la innovacion farmer field schools gender gap escuela de campo para agricultores brecha de género The transition toward sustainable livestock systems is crucial for mitigating global warming and meeting the growing demand for food, particularly in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), where rural areas face significant economic and social challenges. Sustainable practices such as pasture management, silvopastoral integration, efficient water use, and balanced livestock feeding contribute to environmentally responsible production, animal welfare, and climate resilience. Honduras represents a critical case where livestock farming, while central to the agricultural economy, is associated with deforestation, land grabbing, biodiversity loss, and social inequalities. This study analysed 450 producers across four municipalities in Olancho to understand the adoption dynamics of sustainable livestock practices promoted by Heifer International through Field Schools. Using descriptive analysis and an adoption model, the study constructed adoption profiles to better understand transition processes and identify key influencing factors. Results show that project participation, producer age, and environmental interest significantly affect the likelihood of adopting sustainable practices. Adoption levels varied according to the number and types of practices implemented, revealing the most accepted technologies and combinations among producers. Gender differences were notable: 54 % of women were classified as non-adopters compared to 39 % of men, and only 13 women reached the highest adoption level versus 39 men. The econometric analysis confirmed that being male significantly increases the probability of adoption. These findings highlight barriers faced by women, including limited access to technical assistance, information networks, financing, and productive resources. Although women and men share similar educational levels, women are more often linked to smaller farms and have lower participation in agricultural networks. Despite a high perception of participation in development initiatives, women showed lower uptake of sustainable livestock practices. The study emphasises that adoption is a gradual process, involving experimentation and combination of technologies, rather than a discrete shift. These insights provide crucial guidance for policymakers seeking to foster inclusive and sustainable livestock transitions in LAC countries facing comparable challenges. 2025-09-11 2025-10-20T15:03:34Z 2025-10-20T15:03:34Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177225 en Open Access application/pdf Sandoval, D.; Burkart, S.; van der Hoek, R.; Chandler, M.; Tabora, C. (2025) Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems. Presented at Tropentag 2025: Reconcile Land System Changes with Planetary Health. Bonn, Germany, 10-12 September 2025. 5 sl.
spellingShingle evaluation
innovation adoption
gender analysis
análisis de género
farmer participation
sustainable production
producción sostenible
participación de agricultores
adopción de la innovacion
farmer field schools
gender gap
escuela de campo para agricultores
brecha de género
Sandoval, Danny
Burkart, Stefan
van der Hoek, Rein
Chandler, Mark
Tabora, Carlos
Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title_full Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title_fullStr Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title_full_unstemmed Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title_short Livestock farming in Honduras: Adoption levels, challenges, and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
title_sort livestock farming in honduras adoption levels challenges and gender gaps in the transition toward sustainable systems
topic evaluation
innovation adoption
gender analysis
análisis de género
farmer participation
sustainable production
producción sostenible
participación de agricultores
adopción de la innovacion
farmer field schools
gender gap
escuela de campo para agricultores
brecha de género
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177225
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