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The Economic Role of Range Livestock Production in Kasungu Agricultural Development Division (KADD), MalawiPhiri, Phillip H. W. 01 May 1997 (has links)
This study was conducted to determine the effects of seas on and auction and produce marketing systems on prices received by farmers for livestock sales and the effect of price on cattle numbers sold in KADD. Livestock population, carrying capacity, and stocking rate were estimated. Data were analyzed using pie charts, regression methods, and analysis of variance.
There was no significant difference (P=.06) between cattle prices per kilogram during the wet season and after harvest. During the wet season, significantly more cattle were sold than after harvest (P< .001) to purchase food and farm inputs, and pay school fees and medical bills. Market price was only a secondary factor.
Carrying capacity and stocking rate were estimated at 15.00 kg metabolic mass per hectare and 12.00 kg metabolic mass per hectare, respectively.
Most households primarily sold male cattle because females are retained for breeding.
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Action research as a framework for systemic and organic changeGeron, Liduvino S., University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury, Faculty of Agriculture and Rural Development January 1992 (has links)
This document outlines how organizational action was mobilized in examing and improving current organizational practices. The study was conducted in a technical task-based research organization in the Philippines and was triggered by a concern for the seeming unfavorable feedback the organization receives from the external environment. An analysis of the organizational situation showed among other factors, the apparent lack of a mechanism that relates the organization's research findings to policy making. Through action researching and using the Soft Systems Methodology as a framewrok, an action plan was developed which is designed to improve the situation. The document also discusses insights and lessons learnt in the conduct of action research. Particular focus was placed on key issues that affect individual participation and organizational actions; and how action research fares as a potential framework for organic and systemic change. From the examination of the action research experience, it became apparent that in order to fully harness the potentials of action researching, opportunities for individual participation must be well distributed and taken by the action research members. The factors affecting individual participation in group processes such as group needs, group culture and power issues in and out of the group, must likewise be addressed. This is to promote coordination, commitment and critical consciousness among group members which are essential in effecting organic and systemic change. As the research was conducted within the broad setting of agricultural research, where efforts are placed to enhance agricultural development, this document likewise discusses the potential of action research as an alternative framewrok for Research and Development (R and D) activities. It presents how action research can mobilize grassroots initiatives and actions which are crucial to a sustainable agricultural development. / Master of Science (Research) Systems Agriculture
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Agricultural knowledge-support portal-model for South African emerging farmersAkinsola, Olabode Samuel January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (DTech. degree in Business Informatics)--Tshwane University of Technology, 2009. / South Africa’s post-apartheid Black farmers commonly referred to nowadays as “emerging farmers” need knowledge support to be successful in agricultural
productions. Web-based learning enables knowledge users and knowledge providers to
actively engage interactively, and provides a dynamic platform of knowledge support
with unparallel flexibility and convenience. However, this technology is yet to be
adequately harnessed to the benefit of South Africa Black emerging farmers, whourgently requires knowledge support that could enable their transformation into market oriented farming. In this study we present a model to solve this problem.
Qualitative grounded theory approach was utilized as the research methodology. Theresearch revealed that weakly on-demand knowledge support, lack of requisite formal
agricultural education, management skill and knowledge for market oriented farming will remain a major setback to the transformation of Black emerging farmers. The researcher proposed an agricultural knowledge support portal-model. In order to
cover the entire spectrum of agricultural knowledge support process of the emerging farmers, this study has modelled a number of fundamental components such as synchronous and asynchronous knowledge support systems, Interactive services for
personalised knowledge support; Virtual laboratory for researchers and expert
viii networking; knowledge bureau for problems presentation and linkage with expert through expert directory; knowledge repository for resource re-use and knowledge sharing; and e-learning for formal agricultural education of farmers and their family. The
benefit of this research and knowledge support model will enables large groups of dispersed knowledge providers to directly support individuals, thereby creating a link between agricultural knowledge systems, educational institution and other research
organization to pool resources and provide a coherent platform for action. In addition, it will provide a platform of interaction, collaboration and enhance access to knowledge
based on requirement on the web. Emerging farmers will no longer seek solutions, rather personalized solutions comes to the farmers. Knowledge support portal holds a promise to enhance agricultural knowledge acquisition and utilization, for the
transformation of Black emerging farmers into market oriented or commercial farming.
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Multi-national corporations and sustainable developement in the rural economy of Lesotho : the case of small-scale peasant commercial farming (asparagus cultivation) in the Maseru district.Rantso, Tsepiso A. January 2001 (has links)
Many of the Third World countries are characterised by high levels of poverty in the rural
areas. So, many government strategies are geared towards improving the living standards
of the poor rural masses through introduction of cash crops in the agricultural sector.
These are meant to create employment opportunities and provide a sustainable supply of
income for the rural poor. Asparagus production in Lesotho is one of those strategies that
was used by the government to combat rural poverty. In the past years, especially during
the initial years of implementation of the asparagus project. the peasants achieved
sustainable livelihoods. However, in the last decade, the asparagus project was
confronted with many difficulties that made it less beneficial to the peasants. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2001.
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Feasible indicators for monitoring the performance of equity-share schemes in South African agriculture.Gray, Bernadine Claire. January 2004 (has links)
This study aims to develop a robust methodology for measuring the performance of equity-share
schemes in South African agriculture. Equity-share schemes are privately owned
farming operations that are generally restructured as companies with the original owner and
the farmworkers as shareholders. Several studies have investigated various aspects of the
performance of these schemes but no single study has yet measured their performance using a
comprehensive and objective set of criteria. Four categories of criteria are proposed: poverty
alleviation; empowerment and participation; institutional arrangements and governance; and
financial performance. This study does not aim to assess the performance of existing equity-share
schemes rather a methodology for the four criteria based on empirical evidence gathered
in 2004 from a land reform project in the Midlands of KwaZulu-Natal and seven established
equity-share schemes in the Western Cape.
Poverty alleviation is measured using a transition matrix of households grouped by four
different symptoms of poverty: current income, wealth, health and a principal component
index of housing quality based on building materials, access to safe drinking water and
adequate sanitation. Eight. categories of indicators are recommended for empowerment and
participation: control and ownership; skills transfer; understanding of the structure of the
scheme; information; outcomes; trust; outreach; and participation. A scorecard applying
norms based on empirical evidence gathered at equity-share schemes in the Western Cape is
used to assess the indicators. A scorecard approach is also applied to institutional
arrangements and governance, which are measured using three categories of indicators:
accountability, transparency and property rights.
Recognised indicators ;of financial performance are applied to balance sheet and income
statement data provided by four of the seven equity-share schemes in the Western Cape. This
analysis highlights problems with several of the conventional ratios used to measure the
profitability, solvency and growth of recently restructured farming enterprises whose
'empowerment' status attracts exceptionally high levels of debt capital to finance long-term
investments. To avoid these problems it is recommended that, for equity-share schemes,
profitability should be measured by the return on assets or dividend return; solvency by the
debt/asset ratio; liquidity by cash flow projections; growth by changes in the (estimated) real.
value of shares; and workers' total returns by changes in the sum of the real wage bill, capital
gains, dividends, interest and other benefits accruing to workers in aggregate.
The proposed performance measures are relevant, manageable in number and have feasible
norms based on empirical evidence. These indicators and their norms need to be tested on a
wider scale and over time. Further research should be undertaken to estimate weights for the
empowerment and institutional indicators. / Thesis (M.Sc.Agric.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2004.
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A critical analysis of theories of agricultural development and agrarian reform, with reference to agrarian reform policies in Chile (1962-1973)Neocosmos, Michael January 1982 (has links)
This thesis is a work of theory; it is also historical. It attempts to provide a critique of the categories through which the phenomena of agricultural development and land reform are habitually grasped. It is divided into three parts. In the first part three main theoretical orientations to the study of capitalist agrarian development are discussed, both abstractly and with reference to their accounts of Latin American rural society in the 1960's. It is argued that all three are unable to explain adequately the process of social and agrarian change. This inability is traced to the fact that all three reduce social totalities to two or more distinct sub-entities or sub-totalities. The author calls this general position the social problematic of dualism. Its inability. to account for social change is, he argues, traceable to the fact that the existence of the sub-entities into which social totalities are divided, is posited as theoretically prior to the relations which connect them. These points are pursued in the second and third parts of the thesis. In the second part an alternative to dualism' with particular reference to its variants of the separation of a realm of industry from a realm of agriculture, and of the separation of a realm of the economic from a realm of the social, is provided through a detailed theorisation of capitalist social relations. It is argued that the existence of distinct realms of agriculture, industry, economy and society is a real effect of the essential relations of capitalist society, and that these divisions must be transcended through an elucidation of the character of such relations. This is done by distinguishing three forms of capitalist development which are produced by these essential relations. Further examples of a dualist analysis in contemporary theorisations of petty commodity production, the world economy and the articulation of modes of production are discussed. In the third part the author returns to an examination of the Latin American context through a discussion of the case of Chile. The theoretical insights developed in the earlier parts are systematically applied to various aspects of Chilean history from the conquest of Latin America to the 1960's, and to the processes of land reform which covered the decade 1962-1973. It is suggested that the agrarian social transformations which this country experienced are only explicable in terms of a position which systematically transcends all dualist assumptions.
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Prospects for sustainable crop production technologies in East Timor : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Natural Resource Management, Institute of Natural Resources, Massey University, Palmerston North, New ZealandViegas, Edmunda da Silva Soares January 2006 (has links)
The prospects of sustainable crop production technologies in East Timor were discerned with relevant case studies and experimental data. An overview of the agricultural development in East Timor with particular emphasis on the traditional farming and cropping systems was presented complemented by the discussion on the aspects of agricultural mechanization and technological change and their socioeconomic ramifications on food security. Empirical data from tillage trials, established both in East Timor and New Zealand, were gathered and discussed in the quest for a better understanding of tillage effects on soil structure and crop production environment. The agro-climatic zones of East Timor provide a well-defined set of ecological boundaries upon which further collaborative research work can be developed. Given land resources as one of the major capital investments in agriculture development, the drive towards improvement and technical change in agriculture should be directed in a balanced combination, whenever appropriate, between technologies of land-saving (hybrid seeds, irrigation, and drainage) or labour-saving (mechanization, herbicides, varieties and cropping techniques) characteristics. Moreover, the justification for acquiring an improved technology for traditional farmers, to some extent, needs to conform to the features of their subsistence mode of farming. The emphasis in technology dissemination, therefore, will have to shift from communication to education. Experimental results of this study on the effects of tillage, and no-tillage in Particular as a form of conservation tillage, on the edaphic changes affecting cropping environment generally concur with the findings known in the literature. Organic carbon levels are generally restored with cropping in East Timor. In addition, soil bulk density and crop grain and biomass yield were not affected by tillage treatments. Soil compaction was significantly affected by tillage as shown by data from the Palmerston North experiment. Soil aggregate stability in the 0-10 cm topsoil was similar under all the tillage treatments. Manual tillage (MT) had the greatest number of soil aggregates on sieve after a 30-minute wet-sieving (68.3%) followed by no-tillage (NT) (65.1), permanent pasture (PP) (62.6) and conventional tillage (CT) (56.5). Similarly, the top 0-10 cm soil under MT had significantly larger macroporosity (16.4%) than CT (9.23), NT (11.5), and PP (10.6). MT and CT significantly reduced the total C whereas N levels were significantly decreased by tillage (CT, MT and NT) compared to permanent pasture at the top 0-10 cm soil layer. Barley grain and biomass were unaffected by tillage whereas potato tuber yield and biomass were significantly less under no-tillage. Conventional tillage significantly increased water runoff but produced less leachate compared to no-till and permanent pasture. Total soil sediment loss was significantly lower under PP (95.8 kg/ha) and NT (132.9) compared to CT (3556.7) and MT (4652.2). pH of water runoff was significantly reduced under tillage treatments compared to that from permanent pasture whereas nitrogen losses were unaffected. There are at least four major public policy components that will play vital roles in the development of sustainable crop production technologies in East Timor: (i) Agricultural research and development (ii) Agricultural extension (iii) International and regional networking (iv) Shift of policy focus. The policy approach needs to be decentralized and broad-based and conservation agriculture should be promoted as opposed to conventional production agriculture. Three major areas for the future research agenda include: (i) Integrated Farming Systems (ii) Soil tillage and erosion (iii) Applied science and technology. The last component may cover disciplines such as: food policy analysis, farm machinery selection and testing, soil testing and mapping, land evaluation and GIs, bio-energy technologies, improved local seed varieties, adaptive fodder crops for improved grazing and pasture management, appropriate agro-forestry and soil and water conservation technologies and cash crop initiatives.
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Accessibility of rural credit among small farmers in the Philippines : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Applied Science in Rural Development, Institute of Natural Resources, Massey University, Palmerston North, New ZealandPoliquit, Lolita Y. January 2006 (has links)
Credit plays an important role in agricultural development and it is believed that expansion of credit programmes will have beneficial effects on agricultural production and incomes of small farmers. It is also a key to poverty alleviation, livelihood diversification, and increasing the business skills of small farmers. In the Philippines, small-scale and subsistence agriculture source their loans mostly from informal lenders, thus access to formal credit remains low. There is a need to examine further small farmers’ access to credit and investigate their preferences and perceptions regarding credit in order that their access can be improved and their needs through credit can be more effectively met. Determining the problems and the credit needs of small farmers are important considerations in designing appropriate credit systems for them. Accessibility of rural credit in the Philippines was examined, with the primary objective of exploring the use of and access to rural credit by small farmers. This research attempts to explore and understand the perceptions of small farmers toward rural credit, and to collect information in proposing an appropriate credit system for them. Two types of respondents were interviewed for the research; 45 individual farmers, and four key informants in New Corella, Davao del Norte. The research focused on how the farmers perceived the rural credit facilities, their preferences, their reasons for borrowing, and their problems in accessing credit. Qualitative data analysis was done for the information gathered. Access to credit by farmers was limited to the available credit services in the research area, thus farmers’ choices and preferences were not well served which led to borrowing from informal lenders. Credit restrictions such as commodity specific credit programmes, credit that requires collateral, and lengthy and complicated procedures restricted the farmers from accessing formal credit. It is recommended that accessibility to credit by small farmers could be improved by providing innovative financing schemes that address problems of farmers who lack collateral, and minimise long processing of documents and other requirements. In this way, farmers may be encouraged to better utilise formal credit and decrease their reliance on informal lenders, thus avoiding higher interest rates and thereby increasing their farm productivity and household incomes.
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The sustainability of Swedish agriculture in a coevolutionary perspective /Saifi, Basim. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. Uppsala : Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet, 2004.
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Participatory development of an extension approach and policy for Limpopo Province, South AfricaZwane, Elliot Mahlengule. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (D.(Agricultural Economics))--University of Pretoria, 2009. / Includes summary. Includes bibliographical references.
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