Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia

Previous studies in Beseku Ilala peasant association, South Central Ethiopia, have disclosed decreasing soil fertility in the area, a consequence of non-existent crop rotation practices, where a nitrogen-fixing legume, the faba bean (Vicia faba) is of particular interest. Widespread theft has result...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2011
Materias:
_version_ 1855570580067057664
author Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
author_browse Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
author_facet Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
author_sort Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Previous studies in Beseku Ilala peasant association, South Central Ethiopia, have disclosed decreasing soil fertility in the area, a consequence of non-existent crop rotation practices, where a nitrogen-fixing legume, the faba bean (Vicia faba) is of particular interest. Widespread theft has resulted in the abandoning of bean cultivation. In order to solve this problem, the communities agreed to formulate by-laws, utilizing an existing local institution (Iddir) for the implementation. The people belonging to Iddir help members who mourn the death of a family member or a close relative. The aims of these by-laws were to punish the thieves and to urge and support farmers to start growing beans again. Most farmers had subsequently resumed bean cultivation, but in some areas farmers had refrained from growing the bean again. The present study examined the factors affecting the adoption of bean reintroduction in Beseku Ilala peasant association. A cross sectional survey was conducted by means of purposive and snowball sampling. The techniques utilized were individual interviews, key informant interviews and focus group discussions, using open-ended and closed questionnaires. The results revealed that the main factors influencing the adoption of bean cultivation were villagization or community re-location, fear of conflict, small land holdings, population growth, migration, and lack of women participating in decision-making. In addition, unemployment, poverty, and delinquent behaviours were also revealed to be contributing factors, as drivers of bean theft. The results suggest that youth employment and gender participation, particularly in key decision-making processes, are crucial to institute in order to accomplish reduced poverty.
format H2
id RepoSLU3698
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU36982012-04-20T14:24:09Z Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos Conflict Faba Bean Institutions Livelihood Theft Villagization Previous studies in Beseku Ilala peasant association, South Central Ethiopia, have disclosed decreasing soil fertility in the area, a consequence of non-existent crop rotation practices, where a nitrogen-fixing legume, the faba bean (Vicia faba) is of particular interest. Widespread theft has resulted in the abandoning of bean cultivation. In order to solve this problem, the communities agreed to formulate by-laws, utilizing an existing local institution (Iddir) for the implementation. The people belonging to Iddir help members who mourn the death of a family member or a close relative. The aims of these by-laws were to punish the thieves and to urge and support farmers to start growing beans again. Most farmers had subsequently resumed bean cultivation, but in some areas farmers had refrained from growing the bean again. The present study examined the factors affecting the adoption of bean reintroduction in Beseku Ilala peasant association. A cross sectional survey was conducted by means of purposive and snowball sampling. The techniques utilized were individual interviews, key informant interviews and focus group discussions, using open-ended and closed questionnaires. The results revealed that the main factors influencing the adoption of bean cultivation were villagization or community re-location, fear of conflict, small land holdings, population growth, migration, and lack of women participating in decision-making. In addition, unemployment, poverty, and delinquent behaviours were also revealed to be contributing factors, as drivers of bean theft. The results suggest that youth employment and gender participation, particularly in key decision-making processes, are crucial to institute in order to accomplish reduced poverty. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2011 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3698/
spellingShingle Conflict
Faba Bean
Institutions
Livelihood
Theft
Villagization
Gichamo, Tesfanesh Zekiwos
Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title_full Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title_fullStr Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title_short Dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural Ethiopia
title_sort dispute or residing together in harmony? : bean cultivation and theft in rural ethiopia
topic Conflict
Faba Bean
Institutions
Livelihood
Theft
Villagization