Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa

Alley farming is an improved fallow technology developed at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) as a sustainable alternative to slash-and-burn systems practiced by farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. Constraints to the use of the technology have been examined, but studies are limit...

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Main Authors: Adesina, A.A., Coulibaly, O., Manyong, Victor M., Sanginga, N., Mbila, D., Chianu, J., Kamleu, D.G.
Format: Libro
Language:Inglés
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95969
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author Adesina, A.A.
Coulibaly, O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Sanginga, N.
Mbila, D.
Chianu, J.
Kamleu, D.G.
author_browse Adesina, A.A.
Chianu, J.
Coulibaly, O.
Kamleu, D.G.
Manyong, Victor M.
Mbila, D.
Sanginga, N.
author_facet Adesina, A.A.
Coulibaly, O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Sanginga, N.
Mbila, D.
Chianu, J.
Kamleu, D.G.
author_sort Adesina, A.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Alley farming is an improved fallow technology developed at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) as a sustainable alternative to slash-and-burn systems practiced by farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. Constraints to the use of the technology have been examined, but studies are limited which quantitatively assess determinants of farmers' adoption, and the financial profitability of alley farming under alternative policies. The objectives of this paper are to (i) determine the levels of adoption of alley farming among farmers in Benin, Cameroon, and Nigeria, (ii) examine the socioeconomic, village level, and technology-related factors determining the adoption of alley farming by farmers, and (iii) analyze the effects of policy shifts on the financial competitiveness and social profitability of alley farming and other agroforestry technologies. Survey results reveal that despite earlier skepticism about the adoption potential of alley farming, the actual rates of adoption are encouraging for this complex technology. The analysis conducted with Logit models shows that farmers' socioeconomic characteristics, village characteristics, and farmers' perception of technology attributes were all important in explaining farmers' adoption behavior. The results of the policy analysis matrix (PAM) model show that maize production under agroforestry-based systems is socially profitable and financially competitive when compared to maize production relying only on chemical fertilizer, especially after recent policy shifts. The paper concludes with strategies for targeting alley farming to achieve increased adoption and impact.
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spelling CGSpace959692023-02-15T06:32:14Z Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa Adesina, A.A. Coulibaly, O. Manyong, Victor M. Sanginga, N. Mbila, D. Chianu, J. Kamleu, D.G. adoption alley farming policy analysis matrix profitability Alley farming is an improved fallow technology developed at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) as a sustainable alternative to slash-and-burn systems practiced by farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. Constraints to the use of the technology have been examined, but studies are limited which quantitatively assess determinants of farmers' adoption, and the financial profitability of alley farming under alternative policies. The objectives of this paper are to (i) determine the levels of adoption of alley farming among farmers in Benin, Cameroon, and Nigeria, (ii) examine the socioeconomic, village level, and technology-related factors determining the adoption of alley farming by farmers, and (iii) analyze the effects of policy shifts on the financial competitiveness and social profitability of alley farming and other agroforestry technologies. Survey results reveal that despite earlier skepticism about the adoption potential of alley farming, the actual rates of adoption are encouraging for this complex technology. The analysis conducted with Logit models shows that farmers' socioeconomic characteristics, village characteristics, and farmers' perception of technology attributes were all important in explaining farmers' adoption behavior. The results of the policy analysis matrix (PAM) model show that maize production under agroforestry-based systems is socially profitable and financially competitive when compared to maize production relying only on chemical fertilizer, especially after recent policy shifts. The paper concludes with strategies for targeting alley farming to achieve increased adoption and impact. 1999 2018-07-05T06:30:20Z 2018-07-05T06:30:20Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95969 en Open Access Adesina, A., Coulibaly, O., Manyong, V., Sanginga, N., Mbila, D., Chianu, J. & Kamleu, D.G. (1999). Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa, Impact series. Ibadan, Nigeria: IITA, (p. 21).
spellingShingle adoption
alley farming
policy analysis matrix
profitability
Adesina, A.A.
Coulibaly, O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Sanginga, N.
Mbila, D.
Chianu, J.
Kamleu, D.G.
Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title_full Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title_fullStr Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title_short Policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in West and Central Africa
title_sort policy shifts and adoption of alley farming in west and central africa
topic adoption
alley farming
policy analysis matrix
profitability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95969
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