MRDV / Institute for Rural Development / Food and nutritional insecurity, poverty and hunger are some of the 21st
-century challenges baffling most developing economies. Worldwide, 1.2 billion people are estimated to be living in
poverty. Since 1990, the number of people living in extreme poverty has increased by over 50
million in 2014. Among the many public and private institutions that have made several gritty
efforts to address the poverty challenge is the Heifer international through its Heifer International
Pass on Programme (HIPP). Under the HIPP, the Pass on the Gift programme has been implemented in Ward 1 of Mberengwa District for over two decades targeting the food and nutritional insecure, hungry and poverty-stricken people who are given a gift in form of cattle, goats,
chicken etc. This was done with the belief that the gift will add value to their asset base and
serve as stepping stone out of poverty, food and nutrition insecurity. Various reports have been
written on how the programme helped in improving household livelihood. However, the voice of
the beneficiaries was not being heard. This study explored how the Pass-on-the-Gift programme
influenced the householdās livelihoods in Ward 1, Mberengwa District of Zimbabwe.
A multi-stage integrated approach was employed. Both the case study and a cross-sectional
survey designs were employed. Two sequentially integrated phases were followed. On the first
phase, a case study was used to gather data from the Heifer International Pass on Programme
beneficiaries and other key stakeholders. During this stage, data were collected using a semistructured interview guide. Results obtained from the first phase informed formulation of the
questionnaire used in the second phase. Respondents were purposefully sampled in both stages. Data obtained through semi-structured interviews were analyzed using Atlas ti 8 software
while that from a survey was analyzed using IBM SPPS version 25 software to generate descriptive statistics and inferential statistics components.
Results from the first phase of data collection were triangulated with those from the second
phase. This synchronized the two data sets and allowed subsequent discussion of the results.
The research findings revealed that the HIPP influenced all the households of the participating
farmers financially, socially and economically where p= 0.000. Thus, the study confirmed that
the notion that cattle ownership can be used as an avenue of confronting the multi-dimensional
rural development challenges. Furthermore, it was revealed that cattle ownership empowers the
rural smallholder farmers and has potential to assist households dismantle the perpetual dependency on external support, improve their livelihoods and contribute to sustainable development goals. / NRF
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:univen/oai:univendspace.univen.ac.za:11602/1470 |
Date | 16 September 2019 |
Creators | Chidembo, Ranganai |
Contributors | Kilonzo, B. M., Zuwarimwe, J. |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Dissertation |
Format | 1 online resource (xiii, 118 leaves : illustrations some color) |
Rights | University of Venda |
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