2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.iswcr.2020.10.007
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Determinants of adoption of multiple sustainable agricultural practices among smallholder farmers in Nigeria

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Cited by 76 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…Gender of Household Head: Results obtained in Table 3 are partially in tandem with previous findings [46,50,79,80] that male-headed households often have a higher likelihood of adopting agricultural innovations and thus are better adapted to climate change. Being a male-headed household increases the chances of practicing soil conservation compared to their female counterparts.…”
Section: Irrigation Soil Conservation Crop Diversification Diversificsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…Gender of Household Head: Results obtained in Table 3 are partially in tandem with previous findings [46,50,79,80] that male-headed households often have a higher likelihood of adopting agricultural innovations and thus are better adapted to climate change. Being a male-headed household increases the chances of practicing soil conservation compared to their female counterparts.…”
Section: Irrigation Soil Conservation Crop Diversification Diversificsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…The selection of the variables was motivated by previous literature [4,25,[45][46][47], availability of data [48], and economic theories [4] on factors influencing the choice of CCA and are presented in Table 2. Farm and household attributes were included as explanatory variables for assessing determinants of CCA options.…”
Section: Panel Probit Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As reported in Fig 1, maize productivity in Nigeria and Africa as a whole has steadily lagged behind the world average, while in the last 10 years the mean yield of maize in Nigeria has been lesser than Africa's average [1]. Given that the maize farming sector in Nigeria is mainly dominated by small scale rural farmers, the country's performance in terms of yield may be attributed to constraints such as unavailability of modern technologies [30,31], access to finance and extension services, and productive inputs [4,32] which may have implications on farm incomes and food security status of rural households. To address these constraints, rural farmers have resorted to forming self-help groups, an action that dates back to 1926 in Nigeria when cocoa…”
Section: Context and Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although ordered probit and logit models yield similar inferences, they assume standard normal and logistic distributions of the error terms, respectively. An ordered probit model was used in this research as it is a commonly used tool in other related research such as [37][38][39][40][41][42].…”
Section: Specification Of the Econometric Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%