253 research outputs found

    Non-Traditional Exports, Traditional Constraints: The Adoption and Diffusion of Cash Crops among Smallholders in Guatemala

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    More than two decades after non-traditional export crops (NTXs) were introduced to the central highlands of Guatemala to link farmers to global markets and foster rural development, this study uses duration analysis to explore how time-varying household characteristics and external trends play into both the adoption and diffusion processes of NTX among smallholders. Adoption was widespread and rapid, which led the project to be hailed as a pro-poor success, reaching all but the smallest landholders. Potential benefits of NTXs have proven to be high, but constraints to sustained adoption also numerous, particularly in the second decade of the period considered. Over time, more than two-thirds of adopters eventually dropped out, reverting back to more traditional crops, or leaving agriculture altogether. Based on a second round of a 20-year panel survey carried out by the authors, the analysis suggests that smallholders are quite responsive to price incentives when making their repeated decision to continue adopting overtime. Also, in line with previous findings, land size does not seem important in the decision to adopt. However, land quality emerges as a significant factor in prolonging NTX production over time. Overall, the findings suggest that, in the long-run, NTX production does not appear to have been as pro-poor as initially hoped, and that institutions and policy interventions were able to only partially offset these difficulties in favor of less endowed farmers.Crop Production/Industries, International Relations/Trade,

    Rural Income Generating Activities: A Cross Country Comparison

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    This paper uses a newly constructed cross country database composed of comparable variables and aggregates from household surveys to examine the full range of income generating activities carried out by rural households in order to determine: 1) the relative importance of the gamut of income generating activities in general and across wealth categories; 2), the relative importance of diversification versus specialization at the household level; and 3) the influence of rural income generating activities on poverty and inequality. Analysis of the RIGA cross country dataset paints a clear picture of multiple activities across rural space and diversification across rural households. This is true across countries in all four continents, though less so in the African countries included in the dataset. For most countries the largest share of income stems from off farm activities, and the largest share of households have diversified sources of income. Diversification, not specialization, is the norm, although most countries show significant levels of household specialization in non-agricultural activities as well. Nevertheless, agricultural based sources of income remain critically important for rural livelihoods in all countries, both in terms of the overall share of agriculture in rural incomes as well as the large share of households that still specialize in agricultural sources of income.Community/Rural/Urban Development, Consumer/Household Economics,

    Rural Household Access to Assets and Agrarian Institutions: A Cross Country Comparison

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    Agriculture is at the core of the livelihoods of a large share of rural households throughout the developing world. Agricultural growth is a major engine for overall economic growth and possibly the single most important pathway out of poverty in the rural space. This paper characterizes household access to assets and agrarian institutions of households engaged in agricultural activities in a sample of developing countries. The evidence presented in the paper draws from 15 nationally representative household surveys from four regions of the developing world. We find that the access of rural households to a range of agricultural-specific assets (including land and livestock) and institutions is in general low, though highly heterogeneous across countries, and by categories of households within countries. A large share of rural agricultural households do not use or have access to basic productive inputs, agricultural support services or output markets, and in general it is the landless and the smallest landowners who suffer significantly more from this lack of access. We relate this to the households' ability to engage successfully in commercial farming and find consistent supporting evidence for the hypothesis that this lack of access is significantly constraining their potential to engage successfully in agriculture.rural non farm, assets, agrarian institutions, household surveys, Consumer/Household Economics, O13, O57, Q12,

    Persistence in surface overflow of Andean rivers

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    The temporal structure of both deficit (negative) and excess (positive) periods in surface overflow of Andean rivers were analyzed by studying the runs. In Southern areas (in the province of Neuquén and the Southern part of the province of Mendoza), positive and negative groups of anomalies have been found to diminish geometrically over the years. In the Northern areas (in the province of San Juan and Northern part of the province of Mendoza) persistence occurs in negative runs only. This behavior is produced by the influence of the basins located in an arid zone, because of the heterogeneity in the structure of the precipitation in this region.En este trabajo se analiza el comportamiento de la persistencia en el escurrimiento superficial de los ríos andinos, usando el método de rachas de eventos con anomalías positivas o negativas. Se ha encontrado que las rachas positivas o negativas tienen en la zona más austral (provincia de Neuquén y sur de Mendoza) un decaimiento de tipo geométrico con los años; en cambio, hacia la zona más septentrional (provincia de San Juan y norte de Mendoza) aparece la persistencia solamente en las rachas negativas o de sequías. Este comportamiento no se encuentra en la estructura de la precipitación que cae en la cuenca, por lo tanto, se infiere que el mismo sería debido a la regulación que ejercen las cuencas del norte, inmersas en una región de clima árido.Material digitalizado en SEDICI gracias a la colaboración de la Facultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísicas (UNLP).Asociación Argentina de Geofísicos y Geodesta

    Spectral Soil Analysis & Household Surveys: A Guidebook for Integration

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    This Guidebook is intended to be a reference for survey practitioners looking for guidance on integrating soil health testing in household and farm surveys. The role of soil in agrarian societies is unquestionable, yet the complex nature of soil makes it much more challenging to measure than agricultural inputs such as fertilizers or pesticides. Historically, household surveys either include subjective questions of farmer assessment or rely on national-level soil maps to control for land quality, if anything at all. Recent scientific advances in laboratory soil analysis—via spectral soil testing—have opened the door to more rapid, cost-effective objective measurement of soil health in household surveys. This Guidebook explores the nascent possibility of integrating plot-level soil testing in household surveys through a presentation of results comparing various soil assessment methods and a step-by-step guide for practical implementation. In partnership with the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), the Living Standards Measurement Study of the World Bank’s Development Data Group set out to validate (1) the feasibility of implementing spectral soil analysis in household surveys, and (2) the value of subjective farmer assessments of soil quality compared with objective measures in order to determine the need for objective soil analysis, specifically in low-income, smallholder agricultural contexts. These objectives were met by implementing two methodological validation studies, one in Ethiopia and one in Uganda. In both studies, plot-level soil samples were collected following identical international best-practice field protocols and analyzed using wet chemistry and spectral analysis methods at ICRAF’s Soil-Plant Spectral Diagnostics Laboratory. Additionally, plot managers were administered a series of subjective questions that are often used to gauge soil health in national household surveys. These studies resulted in two uniquely rich datasets that allow for comparison of subjective indicators of soil quality against laboratory results. Both laboratory and subjective results can also be compared with publicly available geospatial data, as all plots were georeferenced

    Bioaerosol emissions during organic waste treatment for biopolymer production: A case study

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    Environmentally sustainable methods of waste disposal are a strategic priority. For organic waste management and innovative biological treatments present advantageous opportunities, although organic waste treatment also includes environmental drawbacks, such as bioaerosol pro-duction. This study aims to evaluate bioaerosol spread during an innovative experimental treatment. The process consists of two anaerobic steps: acidogenesis, which includes polyhydroxyalkanoate accumulation, followed by methanogenesis. Bioaerosol, PM10, and endotoxin concentrations were measured at three sampling points during different campaigns to evaluate: (1) the background levels, (2) the contamination produced in the pre-treatment stage, and (3) the residual contamination of the outgoing digested sludge. Environmental PM10 seemed to be generally quite contained, while the endotoxin determination was close to 90 EU/m3. Significant microbial concentrations were detected during the loading of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (fungi > 1300 CFU/m3, Bacillus genus (≈103 CFU/m3), higher Clostridium spp. and opportunistic human pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae), suggesting a significant contamination level. Such results are useful for hazard identification in the risk assessment of innovative processes, as they reveal contaminants potentially harmful to both workers’ health and the environment
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