2008
DOI: 10.1080/13657300802110844
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Constraints to the Adoption of Rice-Fish Farming by Smallholders in Bangladesh: A Farming Systems Analysis

Abstract: & In spite of its potential, the adoption of rice-fish farming among smallholders in Bangladesh is low. This paper seeks to explain this low adoption by evaluating the rice-fish technology as one element of the household farming system. The adoption of the technology is associated with a range of technical, human, and institutional constraints. Rice-fish technology is not structured to address the food security goal of smallholders and, therefore, is adopted by only those who are better placed to assume the ri… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…These are constraints faced by many small‐scale aquaculture industries worldwide and are not unique to lobster farming in Vietnam. For example, Szuster, Chalermwat, Flaherty and Intacharoen (2008) and Nabi (2008) cite water quality issues as the leading management constraints to the development of oyster industry in Thailand and rice‐fish farming in Bangladesh respectively. High feed costs are reported as a major constraint to silver perch industry growth in Australia (Guy et al 2009) and to prawn farming in Bangladesh (Ahmed, Brown & Muir 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are constraints faced by many small‐scale aquaculture industries worldwide and are not unique to lobster farming in Vietnam. For example, Szuster, Chalermwat, Flaherty and Intacharoen (2008) and Nabi (2008) cite water quality issues as the leading management constraints to the development of oyster industry in Thailand and rice‐fish farming in Bangladesh respectively. High feed costs are reported as a major constraint to silver perch industry growth in Australia (Guy et al 2009) and to prawn farming in Bangladesh (Ahmed, Brown & Muir 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the global average rice yield is lower in Bangladesh (4,000 kg/ha/crop) than in Australia, Egypt, Japan, and southern Europe (10,000 kg/ ha/crop), where rice production is highly mechanized and fully irrigated (Frei and Becker 2005). According to Nabi (2008), irrigated rice fields in many parts of Bangladesh could produce three crops a year but irrigation facilities are limited although irrigation is potentially more important than rice-fish farming as an innovative technology.…”
Section: Productivitymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…However, rice-fish farming remains marginal in Bangladesh because of socioeconomic, environmental, technological, and institutional constraints (Nabi 2008). Although rice-fish technology has been demonstrated successfully and a considerable number of farmers have been trained through various projects, this integration has yet to be widely practiced.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Temperature ranges further inland and at higher elevations than the coastal zone are conducive to prawn culture, as demonstrated by established prawn culture in Mymensingh District in north-central Bangladesh (Ahmed et al 2008a). Nevertheless, adoption of prawn-fish-rice farming is generally low elsewhere in the country due to technical, financial and institutional constraints (Nabi 2008). Expansion of prawn-fish-rice farming across the country is feasible due to similar ecological conditions in rice fields but will require CBA approaches supplemented with technical and financial support.…”
Section: Translocation Of Prawn-fish-rice Farming: Coastal To Inlandmentioning
confidence: 99%