Browsing by Subject "Kleinbauernbetrieb"
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Publication Modeling crop yield and farmer adaptation to rainfall variability : the case of Southern Ethiopia(2016) Bocher, Temesgen Fitamo; Berger, ThomasImproving the livelihood of poor households in developing countries by increasing agricultural productivity and production becomes the priority agenda for development actors. However, variability in rainfall has confronted success in achieving this goal. There is pressing interest in analyzing the effects of rainfall variability on household welfare and identifying policy interventions to mitigate its adverse effects. Ethiopian economy primarily depends on rain-fed agriculture. Agriculture is the backbone of the country’s economy; it contributes the lions share of GDP, employment, export earnings, and livelihood. Fluctuations in rainfall distribution and intensity have severely affected the economy in general and the livelihood of smallholder households in particular; the agricultural sector is more prone to changes in climatic condition, which increases the risk of poverty and hunger for poor farm households. Few studies have attempted to analyze the direct effects of rainfall variability on crop yield and its indirect effect on household welfare. Therefore, this thesis aimed at filling the knowledge gap on the impacts of rainfall variability on crop yield and welfare. Moreover, the study explores the role of adaptation strategies in mimicking the negative effects of rainfall variability accounting for household performance decision under resource constraint for Ethiopian farmers. The study employed Mathematical Programming Based Multi-Agent System (MP-MAS) computer simulation techniques to analyze the effects of rainfall variability on crop yield, household welfare and the role of adaptation strategies in mitigating the adverse effects of rainfall variability. Prior to application to the study, the MP-MAS simulation model is parametrized, calibrated, and validated using data from the Ethiopian Rural Household Survey (ERHS), primary data collected from the research area and thirty year rainfall time series data obtained from meteorological stations located near to the study area. To address the mentioned research question a wide range of rainfall and adaptation strategy scenarios were designed. The agent - based model enables us to incorporate different bioeconomic systems in the decision-making process by smallholder farmers, which is otherwise difficult under a real world situation where farm households face inseparable decision-making process. Moreover, the model accounts for the heterogeneity in resource endowment, investment, production, consumption, agro-ecology, input constraints, and demographic distribution among households. Livestock, consumption, crop growth and irrigation water distribution models were combined in this study. The household food consumption decision is estimated by using three stages advanced consumption module and crop water requirement and irrigation water distribution modeled using inbuilt FAO CropWat and EDIC modules, and finally an empirical analysis was done by using STATA version 12. The simulation result suggested that: (i) Both current and future rainfall variability would have negative effects on crop yield and household welfare. (ii) The yield of cereals crops and vegetables are negatively affected by rainfall variability: some perennial crops such as enset gains yield under rainfall variability. (iii) Household welfare deteriorated with rainfall variability; resource poor households are severely affected by rainfall variability. (iv) Adaptation strategies such as non-farm activities, irrigation, and soil and water conservation activities mitigate the negative effects of rainfall variability. (v) Improving the financial or non-farm constraints alone leads to increased income inequality. Therefore, the recommended solution to reduce adverse effects of rainfall variability includes: (i) Implementing integrated policy interventions than a single strategy. (ii) Improving access to credit and access to non-farm activities. (iii) Designing a pro-poor intervention (such as improving the asset base of the poor households). (iv) Improving access and use of improved agricultural technologies, and (v) Increasing access and use of irrigation to enhance agricultural productivity.Publication Möglichkeiten und Grenzen der Sekundärwalderhaltung im Bundesstaat Sucre, Venezuela - Brachewirtschaft, Agroforstsysteme und forstliche Nutzung in der kleinbäuerlichen Landwirtschaft -(2003) Valqui Haase, Alexis Holger; Heidhues, FranzHalf a billion people are considered as direct actors of tropical deforestation. Especially those, who live in the tropics in forest areas or nearby forests as peasants and landless people. They use and destroy the tropical forests by trying to secure the subsistence of their families. This study analysis the leading socio-economic and legal factors of the use and destruction of forest ecosystems in the small scale agriculture of the Paria Region, in the State Sucre, Venezuela. In the Paria Region the small scale agricultural systems secure their subsistence especially trough the cultivation of agricultural products in fallow systems and agroforestry systems. Following questions are treated: In which way does the agrarian reform law and the local land tenure as well as the forest law and the forest politics influence the protection of forests by peasants? How does the landuse systems contribute to the income and subsistence assurance of peasant families as well as to deforestation? Which functions does the forests fulfil from the point of view of the peasants and what benefit could they realise from the forests? A quantitative and qualitative approach was chosen. Standardised survey as well as econometric and statistical data analysis methods, like Cluster analysis and logistical regression, are combined with semistructured interviews and qualitative analysis methods. Conclusions: Forests are seen in the agrarian reform law as well as at community level primarily as a reserve for agricultural land. The "agrarian occupation" which follows the principle, land is owned by them who use it, is an instrument to avoid land concentration. But in countries like Venezuela it has also deforestation as consequence, where forests are seen as land that is not in use. The fact that forests are seen as land that is not in use or even useless land is reinforced by the restriction which peasants are confronted with, due to the forest law and it's implementation, when they wanted to use the forests for income generation. Also the function of the forests as supplier of subsistence goods for the families is loosing importance because of the substitution of this goods by industrial ones. This restriction and development has the consequence that peasants become more and more "disinterested forests managers". The comparison of the fallow systems and agroforestry systems of the Paria Region shows that agroforestry systems are relative better from the view of income generation and forests conservation. They have a lower land productivity, but they have a relative high work productivity and generated better distributed income. On the other side they are less forest destructive. In most of the cases they can be even seen as secondary forests.