ICER2019ARtypologywork
Africa RISING Typology Work - Reference materials
Assembled for the Internally Commissioned External Review
July 2019 - April 2020
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Peer reviewed journal articles
- | Capturing farm diversity with hypothesis-based typologies: An innovative methodological framework for farming system typology development
- | A comparison of statistical and participatory clustering of smallholder farming systems - a case study in Northern Ghana
- | Creating adaptive farm typologies using Naive Bayesian classification
- | Characterising the diversity of smallholder farming systems and their constraints and opportunities for innovation: a case study from the northern region, Ghana
- | Complex systems - Simple solutions? The importance of social context for sustainable intensification
PowerPoint Presentations
- | Using typologies for technology targeting
- | Summary of farmer typologies in the Africa RISING baseline survey data
- | Typologies for farming systems analysis in Africa RISING
- | Why typologies? Approaching communities through learning about livelihood strategies and socio-economic stratification
- | Typology characterization of farmers in West Africa
- | Fitting technology options to farmer context in Mali
- | Integrated systems research for farms and livelihoods in Africa RISING phase II
Reports
- | Typology characterization of farmers in Africa RISING sites in Malawi
- | Typology characterization of farmers in Africa RISING sites in Ghana
- | Typology characterization of farmers in Africa RISING sites in Tanzania
- | Typology characterization of farmers in Africa RISING sites in Mali
- | Typology characterization of farmers in Africa RISING sites in Ethiopia
- | Characterization of farming systems in Africa RISING intervention sites in Malawi, Tanzania, Ghana and Mali
Posters
- | A comparison of farm typology approaches in northern Ghana
- | Complex systems, simple solutions? Evaluating technologies for sustainable intensification in northern Ghana
- | Complex systems, simple solutions? Operationalizing diversity to understand technology adoption
Briefs
- | Comparison of statistical and participatory clustering of smallholder farming systems: A case study in northern Ghana
- | Targeting and bias in participatory research: Evidence from Malawi
Student theses
- | Improving the efficiency of agricultural development: Can farmer typologies be used to predict the adoption of agricultural innovations for the poorest farmers, and therefore, increase the impact of rural development programs on the rural poor?
- | Dealing with farming system diversity in northern Ghana: Typology approaches
- | Why do smallholder farmers in northern-Ghana choose to plough by hoe, with bullocks or with tractors?