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An appropriate conceptual supply chain management model in the Tanzanian agricultural sector : a case study of coffee in the Kagera RegionBagonza, Jasson Bennett Benjamin 12 1900 (has links)
Tanzania’s good climatic condition of four agro-ecological zones and six farming system together with
adequate good soils and water resources with reasonable rainfall patterns (except in semi-arid regions) are
favourable for agricultural production. Despite this abundance of resources, Tanzania is still far from taping full
potentials in crop production and productivity that could be attained if the existing agricultural resources were
fully utilised. The agricultural sector has failed toraise the rural poor above the poverty line and has
perpetuated the existing pervasive poverty among farming communities. These constraints facing the
agricultural sector have contributed to low production and productivity of the agricultural sector. For several
decades the agricultural sector has failed to fulfil its role as the “engine of economic growth”; as a result, the
general picture of the Tanzania’s economy has remained untransformed and unreliable. Given the importance
of agriculture as the mainstay of rural livelihoods, it must grow much faster to realise rural poverty reduction in
Tanzania.
In view of the above state of affairs, this study posed the following research questions: Are support activities
and services in coffee production, processing and marketing significantly linked to allow application of Supply
Chain Management (SCM)?; Do institutions responsible for coffee provide mandatory services to enable
farmers undertake support activities and services in production, processing and marketing of this crop? Finally,
are the coffee marketing support activities and services significantly integrated along the supply chain in order
to enhance its marketing? Thus, the above underlined challenges and questions imply thatstagnation in
agricultural development is a function of a multiplicity of soci-economic, technological and political factors. As a
result, the call for improving the agricultural sector production and productivity needs a holistic approach,
particularly the application of SCM. The above fact suggests that Tanzania should among others, find ways to
increase agricultural production, productivity, promote agro-processing and expand markets for its agriproducts
through a well co-coordinated system. The present study calls for a collaborative and integrative
approach in the supply chain to plan and control the flow of value adding materials from the producers to the
consumers. The objective of this study is to examine the application of the Conceptual Supply Chain
Management Model (SCMM) in coffee support activities and services in the areas of production, processing
and marketing in order to suggest an appropriate model that can improve production and productivity of the
agricultural sector thereby enhancing the income of the rural poor and ultimately alleviating poverty and raising
the standard of living of Tanzanians.
Following the format prescribed by the University of South Africa, this thesis is organized into eight chapters.
Also, it is structured in a coherent manner to bring the logic for the development of the conceptual framework
for the coffee subsector in Kagera region. Chapter One provides the introduction and background
information. It creates a base and sets a framework for the entire study. Chapter Two presents the
literature review including both the theory and practice of SCM. It also presents the background and SCM
development as well as the importance of integrating SCM in the agricultural sector in Kagera, Tanzania and
the world at large. The objective of the chapter is to present an in-depth review of literature and show the gap
so as to make justification for proposing a study on the application of the SCM in agriculture with reference to
Coffee in Kagera Region. Chapter Three discusses the Model Development. It discusses the meaning and
the type of conceptual models. Further more, it discusses the reasons for and the advantage of applying the
conceptual models. Finally, it highlights the rationale for selecting a particular criterion for evaluating the
conceptual models.
Chapter Four presents research methodology including identification of the definition of research and
different research methods and their respective instruments for undertaking this study. It presents the
theoretical and research process, showing the types of research methods and research designs. It also presents in detail, sampling, sampling techniques and data collection techniques. Finally, the chapter
highlights how the collected data have been organised, analysed and presented. Chapter Five is about
research findings. It covers the outcome of the exercise set by Chapter Four. It presents descriptive and
empirical information of basic agricultural support activities along the supply chain from production through
consumption. It involves the analysis of the production, processing and marketing support activities to examine
their influence on the production and productivity of coffee in Kagera Region. Chapter Six entails synthesis
analysis and results. This is an amalgamation of the research findings as well as synthesis, descriptive and
empirical analysis of those findings. Thus, the chapter is about the analysis of coffee production, processing
and marketing support activities and services in Kagera Region.
Chapter Seven describes the contribution to knowledge which shows the existing conceptual SCMM for
coffee in Kagera. The Chapter presents the appropriate conceptual model which adopts planning of many
components in the coffee supply chain such as suppliers, materials, resources, warehouses, transporters and
customers. The Model has been developed and proposed for application in Kagera Region in order to address
the shortcomings addressed in the analysis made in the existing model as indicated in Chapter Six. Chapter
Eight presents the summary, conclusions and recommendations. In this chapter, the study concludes that
coffee marketing support activities and services in Kagera are not significantly linked to production and
processing in order to allow the application of SCM principles. Furthermore, it shows that coffee management
institutions such as private coffee traders, cooperative unions, government regional and district agricultural
offices and other stakeholders do not provide all mandatory services to enable coffee production, processing
and marketing support activities and services. According to this study, marketing support services are not
significantly integrated in the coffee supply chain that will enhance its marketing.
Given this reality, this study proposes the adoption of the appropriate conceptual SCMM. The Coffee SCMM
has been developed to coordinate key players and processes in coffee SCM for the integrated framework. The
proposed model has been successfully implemented in many successful management systems. The
conceptual model for Kagera integrates various participants involved in the entire coffee supply chain including
coffee producers, processors and exporters. The Tanzania Coffee Board (TCB) is proposed to be the overall
coordinator of the entire coffee supply chain. In addition, it proposes an information exchange procedure
among players (feedback) initiated by consumers. For further studies, the study recommends three major
blocks of studies such as support activities and services in the areas of SCM in coffee production, processing
and marketing. Finally, the study proposes these three major areas to be individually and deeply studied. / Business Management / D.B.L.
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Home gardens, cultivated plant diversity, and exchange of planting material in the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve area, northeastern Peruvian AmazonLerch, Natalie Corinna. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Who manages home garden agrobiodiversity? : patterns of species distribution, planting material flow and knowledge transmission along the Corrientes River of the Peruvian AmazonPerrault-Archambault, Mathilde January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Structure, geochemistry, and volcanic history of mid-Tertiary rocks in the Kofa Region, southwestern ArizonaGrubensky, Michael J. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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The geology of the Cleveland Mine area, Gila County, ArizonaSimmons, Woodrow Wilson, 1912- January 1938 (has links)
No description available.
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The geology and ore deposits of the Seventy Nine Mine area, Gila County, ArizonaKiersch, George A., 1918- January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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Zedong Terrane, South TibetMcDermid, Isabella Rose Cross. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Earth Sciences / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Amphibolites of the Bangong-Nujiang suture zone, TibetWang, Weiliang, 王維亮 January 2008 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Earth Sciences / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Managing the maelstrom: Decentralization planning for the Mexico City metropolis.Miller, Mark Michael. January 1988 (has links)
From a current population near 19 million, the Mexico City metropolis may exceed 27 million by the year 2000. The many problems associated with this massive level of urban concentration include severe levels of air pollution, paralyzing congestion, and increasing costs of urban services provision. Meanwhile, the nation's periphery continues to suffer from severe economic and social underdevelopment relative to the nation's capital. Regional policies and plans to address these problems have been dominated by the concept of decentralizing the nation's urban-industrial system: i.e., dispersing urban and industrial growth from the metropolitan core to the national periphery. Mexican regional policy makers and planners have failed to adequately evaluate these proposed policies and plans for decentralization in a critical and rigorous manner. This evaluation must be made in terms of three critical criteria. The first is effectiveness: will a proposed plan genuinely return the benefits which are expected or hoped for? The second is efficiency: among several possible planning alternatives, which will return the greatest social benefits for the smallest social costs? The third is equity: which regional interest groups will be affected, and how will the costs and benefits be distributed among these groups? Research is based on three principal data sources: Mexico's National Development Plan: 1983-1988, which has predominantly determined the nation's sectoral, social, and regional policies during the de la Madrid administration; a plan prepared for the quasi-governmental Commission for the Conurbation of the Nation's Center, for urban-industrial deconcentration from Mexico City into the nation's Central Region; and extensive fieldwork in Mexico City and several other Mexican urban centers, concerned with the actual practice of regional economic development in Mexico today. Based on this research, a regionally disaggregated cost-benefit framework is proposed for policy and planning evaluation, and particularly to facilitate conflict resolution, negotiation, and other forms of adjustment among the many powerful interest groups which compete for scarce regional development resources.
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Apparent fate of recharged nonpurgeable chlorinated organicsWeissenborn, Richard Carl, 1952- January 1988 (has links)
Secondary effluent from the Roger Road Wastewater Treatment Plant undergoes tertiary treatment of dual media filtration and chlorination. The tertiary effluent is recharged and subsequently extracted for irrigation in Tucson, Arizona. The fate of chlorinated organics in this recharge system was investigated in this research. Nonpurgeable organic carbon was found to reach a constant level in the groundwater after being recharged. Not all of the organic carbon was removed from the water. Nonpurgeable organic halogens increased as they flowed away from the recharge basins. Reasons for this increase were not determined. Attempts were made to define the apparent molecular weight distribution of the NPOC and the NPOX. Measured values of the two parameters were consistently greater after the analytical processing than before, making the determination impossible.
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