2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.techfore.2018.06.006
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Enhancing adoption of agricultural technologies requiring high initial investment among smallholders

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Cited by 137 publications
(79 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…There is also skepticism in the literature [18,30] as to whether printed pictures alone can help smallholder farmers in the absence of discussions about farmers' first-hand experience, particularly interpersonal communication involving other farmers or specialists such as extension agents. These results are consistent with previous studies showing that if a farmer directly observes the benefits of a product/practice, it is more accepted [52,53]. That said, some of the high favorable percentages reported in this study should still be viewed skeptically because, often in the Nepalese culture, men and especially women do not like to directly make negative statements to others [54].…”
Section: Participatory Editing and Increased Understanding Of Picturesupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…There is also skepticism in the literature [18,30] as to whether printed pictures alone can help smallholder farmers in the absence of discussions about farmers' first-hand experience, particularly interpersonal communication involving other farmers or specialists such as extension agents. These results are consistent with previous studies showing that if a farmer directly observes the benefits of a product/practice, it is more accepted [52,53]. That said, some of the high favorable percentages reported in this study should still be viewed skeptically because, often in the Nepalese culture, men and especially women do not like to directly make negative statements to others [54].…”
Section: Participatory Editing and Increased Understanding Of Picturesupporting
confidence: 92%
“…One possible explanation is that farmers are able to better understand tools/practices that they have previously directly observed or used rather than seeing them for the first time. This interpretation is consistent with Yigezu et al [52] (p. 6) in their study on the adoption of zero technologies in Syria, where smallholder farmers quickly accepted and practiced an innovation that they could see and try by themselves compared to other innovations that they had only heard about from others. In our study, there was also a difference between control and test farmers in terms of how useful they perceived the lessons to be (Figure 9), which would imply that extension agent interactions or the combined use of ICTs enabling interaction (e.g., media convergence of the picture lessons with a TV/radio interview with a farmer) may be important.…”
Section: Participatory Editing and Increased Understanding Of Picturesupporting
confidence: 90%
“…These variables were used in the selection equation of the ESR model as determinants of farmers' adoption decisions on rotation and improved faba bean varieties. The choice of the explanatory variables was based on basic agronomic and socio-economic principles and the literature (Yigezu et al 2018a;El-Shater et al 2016).…”
Section: Explaining the Low Individual And Joint Adoption Of Improvedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant differences exist in the supply and demand of agricultural technologies and farmers' technology choice behavior, and it takes time for first-time users to learn to apply new techniques into practice [55]. Thus, only having the willingness is not enough.…”
Section: Reasons For the Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%