An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme

<p>The Rice Processing Village programme (RPV) was introduced by the Institute of Post Harvest Technology in which farmers produce and sell value added products instead of paddy. It is an income generating and livelihood development programme that provides economic benefits for the rural peopl...

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Main Authors: C A K Dissanayake, S De Silva, W M C B Wasala, B M K S Thilakarathne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Postgraduate Institute of Agriculture, University of Peradeniya 2015-01-01
Series:Tropical Agricultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tar.sljol.info/articles/7992
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spelling doaj-3d608947fe4341d3a9aa010bc45683052020-11-25T00:11:20ZengPostgraduate Institute of Agriculture, University of PeradeniyaTropical Agricultural Research1016-14222015-01-01241919810.4038/tar.v24i1.79925921An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village ProgrammeC A K Dissanayake0S De Silva1W M C B Wasala2B M K S Thilakarathne3University of PeradeniyaUniversity of PeradeniyaInstitute of Post Harvest Technology, Jayanthi Mawatha, AnuradhapuraInstitute of Post Harvest Technology, Jayanthi Mawatha, Anuradhapura<p>The Rice Processing Village programme (RPV) was introduced by the Institute of Post Harvest Technology in which farmers produce and sell value added products instead of paddy. It is an income generating and livelihood development programme that provides economic benefits for the rural people. The paper aims to determine the success of the RPV programme in the formation of five capital resources: physical, financial, human, social and natural. Fifty members from six RPVs in Anuradhapura district were randomly selected for the survey. Data were collected through a field survey using a questionnaire, key informant interviews and secondary data sources. The study revealed that the members have developed the human, social, physical and financial resources and used the natural capital effectively to generate an average additional monthly income of Rs.17, 530 per family. Therefore, RPV is an economically beneficial and socially acceptable livelihood development programme for rice producing rural communities in Anuradhapura district.</p><p>Tropical Agricultural Research Vol. 24(1): 91-98(2012)</p><p>DOI:<strong> </strong><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/tar.v24i1.7992">http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/tar.v24i1.7992</a></p>https://tar.sljol.info/articles/7992capital sourcesincome generationlivelihood developmentrice processing villagerural community
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C A K Dissanayake
S De Silva
W M C B Wasala
B M K S Thilakarathne
spellingShingle C A K Dissanayake
S De Silva
W M C B Wasala
B M K S Thilakarathne
An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
Tropical Agricultural Research
capital sources
income generation
livelihood development
rice processing village
rural community
author_facet C A K Dissanayake
S De Silva
W M C B Wasala
B M K S Thilakarathne
author_sort C A K Dissanayake
title An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
title_short An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
title_full An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
title_fullStr An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
title_full_unstemmed An Investigation of the Rice Processing Village Programme
title_sort investigation of the rice processing village programme
publisher Postgraduate Institute of Agriculture, University of Peradeniya
series Tropical Agricultural Research
issn 1016-1422
publishDate 2015-01-01
description <p>The Rice Processing Village programme (RPV) was introduced by the Institute of Post Harvest Technology in which farmers produce and sell value added products instead of paddy. It is an income generating and livelihood development programme that provides economic benefits for the rural people. The paper aims to determine the success of the RPV programme in the formation of five capital resources: physical, financial, human, social and natural. Fifty members from six RPVs in Anuradhapura district were randomly selected for the survey. Data were collected through a field survey using a questionnaire, key informant interviews and secondary data sources. The study revealed that the members have developed the human, social, physical and financial resources and used the natural capital effectively to generate an average additional monthly income of Rs.17, 530 per family. Therefore, RPV is an economically beneficial and socially acceptable livelihood development programme for rice producing rural communities in Anuradhapura district.</p><p>Tropical Agricultural Research Vol. 24(1): 91-98(2012)</p><p>DOI:<strong> </strong><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/tar.v24i1.7992">http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/tar.v24i1.7992</a></p>
topic capital sources
income generation
livelihood development
rice processing village
rural community
url https://tar.sljol.info/articles/7992
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