R
Rashid M. Hassan
Researcher at University of Pretoria
Publications - 181
Citations - 11180
Rashid M. Hassan is an academic researcher from University of Pretoria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Agriculture. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 180 publications receiving 10159 citations. Previous affiliations of Rashid M. Hassan include CGIAR.
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Determinants of farmers’ choice of adaptation methods to climate change in the Nile Basin of Ethiopia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the major methods used by farmers to adapt to climate change in the Nile Basin of Ethiopia, the factors that affect their choice of method, and the barriers to adaptation.
Posted ContentDOI
Determinants of African farmers’ strategies for adapting to climate change: multinomial choice analysis
TL;DR: This paper analyzed determinants of farm-level climate adaptation measures in Africa using a multinomial choice model fitted to data from a cross-sectional survey of over 8000 farms from 11 African countries.
Posted ContentDOI
Micro-Level Analysis of Farmers’ Adaptation to Climate Change in Southern Africa
TL;DR: In this paper, a multivariate discrete choice model was used to identify the determinants of farm-level adaptation strategies and found that access to credit, information (climatic and agronomic) as well as to markets (input and output) can significantly increase farm level adaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Perception of and adaptation to climate change by farmers in the Nile basin of Ethiopia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employed the Heckman sample selection model to analyse the two-step process of adaptation to climate change, which initially requires farmers' perception that climate is changing prior to responding to changes through adaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Will African agriculture survive climate change
Pradeep Kurukulasuriya,Robert Mendelsohn,Rashid M. Hassan,James Benhin,Temesgen Deressa,Mbaye Diop,Helmy Mohamed Eid,K. Yerfi Fosu,Glwadys Aymone Gbetibouo,Suman L. Jain,Ali Mahamadou,Renneth Mano,Jane Kabubo-Mariara,Samia El-Marsafawy,Ernest L. Molua,Samiha Ouda,Mathieu Ouédraogo,Isidor Sene,David Maddison,S. Niggol Seo,Ariel Dinar +20 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of more than 9,000 farmers across 11 African countries, a cross-sectional approach was used to estimate how farm net revenues are affected by climate change compared with current mean temperature.