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Book ChapterDOI

Adoption of agroforestry innovations in the tropics: A review

D. E. Mercer
- 01 Jul 2004 - 
- Vol. 61, Iss: 1, pp 311-328
TLDR
In this article, the authors reviewed the theoretical and empirical literature that has developed during the past decade analyzing agroforestry adoption from a variety of perspectives and identified needed future research.
Abstract
The period since the early 1990s has witnessed an explosion of research on the adoption of agroforestry innovations in the tropics. Much of this work was motivated by a perceived gap between advances in agroforestry science and the success of agroforestry-based development programs and projects. Achieving the full promise of agroforestry requires a fundamental understanding of how and why farmers make long-term land-use decisions and applying this knowledge to the design, development, and ‘marketing’ of agroforestry innovations. This paper reviews the theoretical and empirical literature that has developed during the past decade analyzing agroforestry adoption from a variety of perspectives and identifies needed future research. Much progress has been made, especially in using binary choice regression models to assess influences of farm and household characteristics on adoption and in developing ex-ante participatory, on-farm research methods for analyzing the potential adoptability of agroforestry innovations. Additional research-needs that have been identified include developing a better understanding of the role of risk and uncertainty, insights into how and why farmers adapt and modify adopted systems, factors influencing the intensity of adoption, village-level and spatial analyses of adoption, the impacts of disease such as AIDS and malaria on adoption, and the temporal path of adoption.

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Citations
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Household-level determinants of adoption of improved natural resources management practices among smallholder farmers in western Kenya

TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that the size of the farm owned by a household, the value of its livestock, off-farm income, family labor supply, and the educational attainment and gender of the household head all had a significant positive effect on the likelihood of adoption.
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The role of knowledge, attitudes and perceptions in the uptake of agricultural and agroforestry innovations among smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analytical framework that combines both extrinsic and intrinsic factors in farmers' decisions to adopt new agricultural technologies and apply the framework to agroforestry adoption as a case study.
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Factors influencing the adoption of precision agricultural technologies: a review for policy implications

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Strengthening and Implementing the Global Response

TL;DR: The feasibility of mitigation and adaptation options, and the enabling conditions for strengthening and implementing the systemic changes, are assessed in this article, where the authors consider the global response to warming of 1.5oC comprises transitions in land and ecosystem, energy, urban and infrastructure, and industrial systems.
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Swidden Transformations and Rural Livelihoods in Southeast Asia

TL;DR: In this paper, the major interactions between the transformation of swidden farming and the pursuit of rural livelihoods in the uplands of Southeast Asia are explored, drawing on selected literature, workshop reflections, and six case studies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Poverty, consumption risk, and soil conservation ☆

TL;DR: In this article, a stochastic dynamic model is used to show how consumption risks and costs of investment influence incentives to adopt soil conservation measures on low-income farms and how the value of soil conservation depends on the cost of investing, the risk characteristics of the soil conservation method and differences among households in capacity to bear risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Quality of Science in Participatory Research: A Case Study from Eastern Zambia

TL;DR: In this paper, a tradeoff between the use of micro-level, gender-sensitive, and ethnographic participatory methods and the commitment to the scientific method is discussed. But, the authors do not discuss the trade-off between scientific rigor for ethnographic accuracy, or vice versa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tree planting by small producers in the tropics: A comparative study of Brazil and Panama

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine tree-planting efforts by small farmers in the tropical frontier regions of Panama and Brazil in order to gauge the magnitude of reforestation activities, and to identify factors that influence these efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risks and returns from soil conservation: evidence from low-income farms in the Philippines

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined risks and returns associated with soil conservation on hillside farms in the Philippines and combined stochastic efficiency analysis with a heteroskedastic regression model to assess the impacts of contour hedgerows on low-income corn farms.
Book ChapterDOI

Uncertainty and Adoption of Sustainable Farming Systems

TL;DR: There is wide interest among agricultural policy and research institutions in the process of adoption of innovations that promote land conservation, impediments to that adoption, and possible measures to promote adoption as discussed by the authors.
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