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Motivations for the use of sustainable intensification practices among smallholder farmers in Tanzania and Malawi

Jambo Isaac Jonathan, Groot Jeroen C.J., Descheemaeker Katrien, Bekunda Mateete, Tittonell Pablo. 2019. Motivations for the use of sustainable intensification practices among smallholder farmers in Tanzania and Malawi. NJAS Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences, 89 (1) : 1-10.

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Quartile : Q2, Sujet : AGRICULTURE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY

Résumé : Agricultural techniques and technologies that could foster sustainable intensification of farming (hereafter: SI practices) can originate from existing farm practices, from the adoption of externally suggested new practices, or from an adaptation of existing or new practices. The rate at which farmers use SI practices is often low and influenced by on-farm biophysical and socio-economic conditions. There is a narrow understanding of the role of motivations and the balance between external incentives and intrinsic motivations for use of SI practices. We analysed the role of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations among 246 sampled households alongside the perceived benefits and constraints from SI practices in five districts of Malawi and Tanzania. Our results showed that farmer decisions were not exclusively dependent on external incentives, but also on intrinsic values which farmers attach to their production resources and farming practices. Despite various benefits perceived, farmers highlighted the lack of financial resources as a major constraint to the use of externally proposed SI practices. While we hypothesized that intrinsic motivation would be much stronger than extrinsic in influencing decisions to use SI practices, our results demonstrated equal importance of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations in influencing the number of SI practices which smallholder farmers used. We suggest explicitly addressing both intrinsic and extrinsic motivations in further research in combination with socio-economic and biophysical variables to give a better reflection of what drives farmers' decisions to use more sustainable farming practices. We argue that the design of SI research programs should support motivations of diversified farmers to participate in such programs. Emphasising farmers' autonomy, a key to intrinsic motivation, can stimulate ownership of SI projects and smoothen the process of adoption, adaptation and use of SI practices by farmers, and is expected to reduce the mismatch between proposed practices and farmers' expectations.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : petite exploitation agricole, agriculture durable, pratique agricole, participation des agriculteurs, exploitation agricole familiale, durabilité, intensification, adoption de l'innovation, petit agriculteur, comportement humain, innovation, diversification

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : République-Unie de Tanzanie, Malawi

Mots-clés libres : Self determination theory, Farming systems, Sustainable development, Technology adoption, External drivers, Farming constraints

Champ stratégique Cirad : CTS 2 (2019-) - Transitions agroécologiques

Agences de financement hors UE : United States Agency for International Development

Projets sur financement : (USA) Feed the Future

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Jambo Isaac Jonathan, Wageningen University and Research Centre (NLD)
  • Groot Jeroen C.J., Wageningen University and Research Centre (NLD)
  • Descheemaeker Katrien, Wageningen University (NLD)
  • Bekunda Mateete, IITA (TZA)
  • Tittonell Pablo, CONICET (ARG)

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/603573/)

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