2023
DOI: 10.1002/sd.2674
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Complexities of sustainable palm oil production by smallholders in sub‐Saharan Africa

Lacour Mody Ayompe,
Raymond Ndip Nkongho,
Lionel M. Wandum
et al.

Abstract: Sub‐Saharan Africa is increasingly viewed as an important area for oil palm cultivation and expansion. Palm oil is a commodity that can help developing countries like Cameroon attain their sustainable development goals (SDGs) targets through poverty alleviation (SDG 1) and by providing revenue to smallholder farmers to buy a variety of food thereby reducing hunger. However, due to the many negative environmental and social consequences, the sector needs to be made more sustainable. In this study, we set out to… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 63 publications
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“…Cluster 2, symbolized in green, consists of studies that tend to lead to almost the same conditions as the previous cluster, there are also several dominant keywords, namely Deforestation, Palm Oil, Policy, Area, Benefit, Use. These keywords, for example, discuss studies that lead as follows: most of the supply base and concessions of farmers in Sumatra and Kalimantan were located in large mammal habitats in the 1990s and in areas with tropical biodiversity [10], small farmers weak land ownership rights, poor quality seeds and low yielding palm oil, as well as a lack of skills, expertise and access to funding [11], the global agricultural value chain on sustainability governance initiated by the public and the private sector [12], palm oil commodities achieve the targets of sustainable development and poverty alleviation goals [13]. Cluster 3, symbolized in blue, consists of several dominant keywords, namely Smallholder, Stakeholder, Implication and the dominant study location in Malaysia.…”
Section: Network Visualizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cluster 2, symbolized in green, consists of studies that tend to lead to almost the same conditions as the previous cluster, there are also several dominant keywords, namely Deforestation, Palm Oil, Policy, Area, Benefit, Use. These keywords, for example, discuss studies that lead as follows: most of the supply base and concessions of farmers in Sumatra and Kalimantan were located in large mammal habitats in the 1990s and in areas with tropical biodiversity [10], small farmers weak land ownership rights, poor quality seeds and low yielding palm oil, as well as a lack of skills, expertise and access to funding [11], the global agricultural value chain on sustainability governance initiated by the public and the private sector [12], palm oil commodities achieve the targets of sustainable development and poverty alleviation goals [13]. Cluster 3, symbolized in blue, consists of several dominant keywords, namely Smallholder, Stakeholder, Implication and the dominant study location in Malaysia.…”
Section: Network Visualizationmentioning
confidence: 99%