Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya

Understanding the diversity of current states, life cycles and past trajectories of households and agroecosystems is essential to contextualise the co-design of more sustainable agroecosystems. The objective of this paper was to document and analyse current states, trajectories of changes and their major drivers of households in a highly populated maize-based agroecosystem of Western Kenya. In 2013, we revisited 20 rural households that were surveyed, analysed and categorised 10 years ago (2003) in order to describe major changes in livelihood strategies, land use and soil fertility status. The household-level analysis was complemented with the analysis of secondary data on changes in drivers at the national level for the study period. The diachronic study showed a close association between drivers such as market and transport development, and the structure of rural households in terms of demographic shifts, land and labour exchanges, increased costs of agricultural inputs and better connectivity to markets. Between 2003 and 2013, the surveyed households experienced an increase in non-agricultural income by 30 %; intensity of land cultivation by 60 %; use of hybrid maize seeds by 35 %; and of synthetic fertilisers by almost 50 %. Local households increase their number of cross-bred livestock in detriment of local breeds and used less manure to fertilise their soils. In contrast, there were few changes in terms of food self-sufficiency (around 9 months per year) and in soil conditions (soil fertility was already poor in 2003). In terms of livelihood strategies, better-endowed households tended to diversify and acquire land that enabled them to adapt and benefit from the major changes observed in external drivers. In contrast, more vulnerable households sold labour and land to cope with such changes, remaining in a poverty trap. Households combine and explore diverse strategies to act, cope and adapt to fast-changing local and regional drivers. Policy or development programmes need to account for such diversity and dynamics to support the co-development of more adaptive and sustainable smallholder agroecosystems.

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Main Authors: Valbuena, D., Groot, J.C.J., Mukalama, J., Gerard, B., Tittonell, P.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer Verlag 2015
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Social and Environmental Change, Adaptive Capacity, Household Diversity, Drivers of Change, SOCIAL CHANGE, ENVIRONMENT, ADAPTABILITY, HOUSEHOLDS, AGROECOSYSTEMS, LIVELIHOODS,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/4634
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-46342023-11-27T20:35:37Z Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya Valbuena, D. Groot, J.C.J. Mukalama, J. Gerard, B. Tittonell, P. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Social and Environmental Change Adaptive Capacity Household Diversity Drivers of Change SOCIAL CHANGE ENVIRONMENT ADAPTABILITY HOUSEHOLDS AGROECOSYSTEMS LIVELIHOODS Understanding the diversity of current states, life cycles and past trajectories of households and agroecosystems is essential to contextualise the co-design of more sustainable agroecosystems. The objective of this paper was to document and analyse current states, trajectories of changes and their major drivers of households in a highly populated maize-based agroecosystem of Western Kenya. In 2013, we revisited 20 rural households that were surveyed, analysed and categorised 10 years ago (2003) in order to describe major changes in livelihood strategies, land use and soil fertility status. The household-level analysis was complemented with the analysis of secondary data on changes in drivers at the national level for the study period. The diachronic study showed a close association between drivers such as market and transport development, and the structure of rural households in terms of demographic shifts, land and labour exchanges, increased costs of agricultural inputs and better connectivity to markets. Between 2003 and 2013, the surveyed households experienced an increase in non-agricultural income by 30 %; intensity of land cultivation by 60 %; use of hybrid maize seeds by 35 %; and of synthetic fertilisers by almost 50 %. Local households increase their number of cross-bred livestock in detriment of local breeds and used less manure to fertilise their soils. In contrast, there were few changes in terms of food self-sufficiency (around 9 months per year) and in soil conditions (soil fertility was already poor in 2003). In terms of livelihood strategies, better-endowed households tended to diversify and acquire land that enabled them to adapt and benefit from the major changes observed in external drivers. In contrast, more vulnerable households sold labour and land to cope with such changes, remaining in a poverty trap. Households combine and explore diverse strategies to act, cope and adapt to fast-changing local and regional drivers. Policy or development programmes need to account for such diversity and dynamics to support the co-development of more adaptive and sustainable smallholder agroecosystems. 1395–1407 2016-01-07T21:24:50Z 2016-01-07T21:24:50Z 2015 Article http://hdl.handle.net/10883/4634 10.1007/s10113-014-0702-0 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF KENYA Kenya Springer Verlag 15 Regional Environmental Change
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Social and Environmental Change
Adaptive Capacity
Household Diversity
Drivers of Change
SOCIAL CHANGE
ENVIRONMENT
ADAPTABILITY
HOUSEHOLDS
AGROECOSYSTEMS
LIVELIHOODS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Social and Environmental Change
Adaptive Capacity
Household Diversity
Drivers of Change
SOCIAL CHANGE
ENVIRONMENT
ADAPTABILITY
HOUSEHOLDS
AGROECOSYSTEMS
LIVELIHOODS
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Social and Environmental Change
Adaptive Capacity
Household Diversity
Drivers of Change
SOCIAL CHANGE
ENVIRONMENT
ADAPTABILITY
HOUSEHOLDS
AGROECOSYSTEMS
LIVELIHOODS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Social and Environmental Change
Adaptive Capacity
Household Diversity
Drivers of Change
SOCIAL CHANGE
ENVIRONMENT
ADAPTABILITY
HOUSEHOLDS
AGROECOSYSTEMS
LIVELIHOODS
Valbuena, D.
Groot, J.C.J.
Mukalama, J.
Gerard, B.
Tittonell, P.
Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
description Understanding the diversity of current states, life cycles and past trajectories of households and agroecosystems is essential to contextualise the co-design of more sustainable agroecosystems. The objective of this paper was to document and analyse current states, trajectories of changes and their major drivers of households in a highly populated maize-based agroecosystem of Western Kenya. In 2013, we revisited 20 rural households that were surveyed, analysed and categorised 10 years ago (2003) in order to describe major changes in livelihood strategies, land use and soil fertility status. The household-level analysis was complemented with the analysis of secondary data on changes in drivers at the national level for the study period. The diachronic study showed a close association between drivers such as market and transport development, and the structure of rural households in terms of demographic shifts, land and labour exchanges, increased costs of agricultural inputs and better connectivity to markets. Between 2003 and 2013, the surveyed households experienced an increase in non-agricultural income by 30 %; intensity of land cultivation by 60 %; use of hybrid maize seeds by 35 %; and of synthetic fertilisers by almost 50 %. Local households increase their number of cross-bred livestock in detriment of local breeds and used less manure to fertilise their soils. In contrast, there were few changes in terms of food self-sufficiency (around 9 months per year) and in soil conditions (soil fertility was already poor in 2003). In terms of livelihood strategies, better-endowed households tended to diversify and acquire land that enabled them to adapt and benefit from the major changes observed in external drivers. In contrast, more vulnerable households sold labour and land to cope with such changes, remaining in a poverty trap. Households combine and explore diverse strategies to act, cope and adapt to fast-changing local and regional drivers. Policy or development programmes need to account for such diversity and dynamics to support the co-development of more adaptive and sustainable smallholder agroecosystems.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Social and Environmental Change
Adaptive Capacity
Household Diversity
Drivers of Change
SOCIAL CHANGE
ENVIRONMENT
ADAPTABILITY
HOUSEHOLDS
AGROECOSYSTEMS
LIVELIHOODS
author Valbuena, D.
Groot, J.C.J.
Mukalama, J.
Gerard, B.
Tittonell, P.
author_facet Valbuena, D.
Groot, J.C.J.
Mukalama, J.
Gerard, B.
Tittonell, P.
author_sort Valbuena, D.
title Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
title_short Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
title_full Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
title_fullStr Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of Western Kenya
title_sort improving rural livelihoods as a "moving target": trajectories of change in smallholder farming systems of western kenya
publisher Springer Verlag
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/4634
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