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02823nam a2200217Ia 4500 |
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10.3389-fsufs.2022.541798 |
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220706s2022 CNT 000 0 und d |
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|a 2571581X (ISSN)
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245 |
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|a Combining Climate Smart Agriculture Practises Pays Off: Evidence on Food Security From Southern Highland Zone of Tanzania
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260 |
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|b Frontiers Media S.A.
|c 2022
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|z View Fulltext in Publisher
|u https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2022.541798
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|a Concerns of food insecurity and climate change are serious global challenges, Tanzania included. In response, farm households are using various climate-smart agricultural practises (CSA-practises) which are believed to play a vital role to increase agricultural productivity, increasing resilience to climate change, and reducing mitigation costs for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions while improving households' food security. Despite these benefits of CSA-practises but the usage of these practises is still voluntary and its impact on household welfare specifically food security is not well-documented in Tanzania, particularly in Mbeya and Songwe Region. Therefore, the determinants of using CSA-practises (in particular organic manure, drought-tolerant maize seeds, and irrigation) and the impact of the usage of household food security was examined. The cross-sectional study design was used to collect information from farming households in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania (Mbeya and Songwe regions). To evaluate the impact of the combination of CSA-practises on household food security the study used a multinomial endogenous treatment effect model. A counterfactual analysis was conducted to compare the impacts from different combinations of CSA-practises considered. The findings show that household, plot, and institutional characteristics have significant effects on the usage of a different combination of CSA-practises. The study also found that the highest payoff of food security is achieved when CSA-practises are used in combination rather than in isolation. The package that contains a combination of drought-tolerant maize seeds and Irrigation (Or0Dt1Ir1) gave a higher payoff than the combination of all three CSA-practises. The study suggests that based on the practises considered in this study, the usage of a combination of various practises results in better food security compared to the usage of these practises individually. This indicates that promoting a combination of CSA-practises could enhance household food security. Copyright © 2022 Bongole, Hella and Bengesi.
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|a agriculture
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|a climate
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|a food
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|a practises
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|a smart
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|a Bengesi, K.M.K.
|e author
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|a Bongole, A.J.
|e author
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|a Hella, J.P.
|e author
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773 |
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|t Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
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