Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)

The village baseline study of Doggoh village in the CCAFS benchmark site Jirapa-Lawra in Ghana took place from 26th to 28st July 2011. Focus group discussions were conducted separately for men and women. Doggoh village is located in a Sudan Savannah characterized by a considerable tree population,...

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Main Authors: Onyango, Leah, Iddrisu Y, Mango, Joash, Kurui, Zena, Wamubeyi, B., Bawayelaaza Nyuor A, Naab, Jesse B.
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24838
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author Onyango, Leah
Iddrisu Y
Mango, Joash
Kurui, Zena
Wamubeyi, B.
Bawayelaaza Nyuor A
Naab, Jesse B.
author_browse Bawayelaaza Nyuor A
Iddrisu Y
Kurui, Zena
Mango, Joash
Naab, Jesse B.
Onyango, Leah
Wamubeyi, B.
author_facet Onyango, Leah
Iddrisu Y
Mango, Joash
Kurui, Zena
Wamubeyi, B.
Bawayelaaza Nyuor A
Naab, Jesse B.
author_sort Onyango, Leah
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The village baseline study of Doggoh village in the CCAFS benchmark site Jirapa-Lawra in Ghana took place from 26th to 28st July 2011. Focus group discussions were conducted separately for men and women. Doggoh village is located in a Sudan Savannah characterized by a considerable tree population, and the farming system it practices involves cultivation among trees. Land is cultivated by individuals but owned and administered communally through a traditional system of local chiefs. The average land productivity is low and the community can only produce enough to feed themselves for 3 months a year, resulting in the need to seek food from other sources for 9 months of the year. To survive, people depend on remittances. Trees are communally managed with community sanctions against those who break the accepted practice. Nonetheless, the sale of wood fuel is putting pressure on the tree population. There is evidence of degradation on the landscape where vegetation has been removed and there is bare soil. The community relies on boreholes for their domestic water supply and take for granted the value of wetlands and the rivers, which remained effectively unmanaged. The participants identified 22 organisations in the village, including 12 operating beyond the locality, 3 functioning within the locality and 7 operational within the community. Seventeen organisations contribute to food security, and other 14 encourage natural resource management. Organisations and radio are the most important sources of information.
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publishDate 2012
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spelling CGSpace248382023-03-12T13:33:32Z Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108) Onyango, Leah Iddrisu Y Mango, Joash Kurui, Zena Wamubeyi, B. Bawayelaaza Nyuor A Naab, Jesse B. climate crop management natural resources management household food security The village baseline study of Doggoh village in the CCAFS benchmark site Jirapa-Lawra in Ghana took place from 26th to 28st July 2011. Focus group discussions were conducted separately for men and women. Doggoh village is located in a Sudan Savannah characterized by a considerable tree population, and the farming system it practices involves cultivation among trees. Land is cultivated by individuals but owned and administered communally through a traditional system of local chiefs. The average land productivity is low and the community can only produce enough to feed themselves for 3 months a year, resulting in the need to seek food from other sources for 9 months of the year. To survive, people depend on remittances. Trees are communally managed with community sanctions against those who break the accepted practice. Nonetheless, the sale of wood fuel is putting pressure on the tree population. There is evidence of degradation on the landscape where vegetation has been removed and there is bare soil. The community relies on boreholes for their domestic water supply and take for granted the value of wetlands and the rivers, which remained effectively unmanaged. The participants identified 22 organisations in the village, including 12 operating beyond the locality, 3 functioning within the locality and 7 operational within the community. Seventeen organisations contribute to food security, and other 14 encourage natural resource management. Organisations and radio are the most important sources of information. 2012-10 2012-11-26T21:42:09Z 2012-11-26T21:42:09Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24838 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security Onyango L, Iddrisu Y, Mango J, Kurui Z, Wamubeyi B, Bawayelaaza Nyuor A, Naab B. 2012. Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108). Copenhagen, Denmark: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
spellingShingle climate
crop management
natural resources management
household
food security
Onyango, Leah
Iddrisu Y
Mango, Joash
Kurui, Zena
Wamubeyi, B.
Bawayelaaza Nyuor A
Naab, Jesse B.
Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title_full Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title_fullStr Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title_full_unstemmed Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title_short Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Lawra – Jirapa, Ghana (GH0108)
title_sort village baseline study site analysis report for lawra jirapa ghana gh0108
topic climate
crop management
natural resources management
household
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/24838
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