Characterization of maize producing households in drought prone regions of Eastern Africa

Agriculture in eastern Africa is predominantly rainfed and maize is a major food crop, primarily produced for home consumption and the market by small-scale family farms. The study characterized farm households in the drought prone maize growing areas of eastern Africa synthesizing data from parallel household surveys in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. The study provides a comparative analysis of the farm households’ assets, livelihood strategies and crop management practices, with an emphasis on maize and maize seed. This illustrates how farmers in a similar agro-ecological environment but with different socio-economic and institutional settings have variously adapted to living with drought and how the inherent weather risk co-determines the livelihood portfolio, agricultural intensification incentives and system development pathways. The study thereby illustrates the challenges for agricultural intensification in such drought prone environments and the scope for drought tolerant maize varieties and explores the research and development implications.

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Additional Info

Field Value
Author Erenstein, Olaf, Kassie, Girma T., Langyintuo, Augustine, Mwangi, Wilfred
Maintainer CIMMYT Research Data & Software Repository Network
Last Updated January 20, 2025, 15:03 (UTC)
Created January 20, 2025, 15:03 (UTC)
creator Erenstein, Olaf
date 2015-03-10T00:00:00
harvest_object_id 3022bf32-24ef-4170-a2f0-2127a9202084
harvest_source_id a58b0729-e941-4389-816d-5823f01c0d28
harvest_source_title CIMMYT Research Data
identifier https://hdl.handle.net/11529/10133
language English
metadata_modified 2024-10-26T07:00:03
set_spec cimmytdatadvn