4.7 Article

Elaborating institutional arrangements to better enhance sustainable crop intensification in Uganda: A farmers' perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
Volume 98, Issue -, Pages 68-79

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2023.02.002

Keywords

Uganda; Service provision; Institutional articulation; Transaction costs; Institutional arrangements

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Weak and inefficient institutional arrangements have been identified as a major cause of the slow pace of agricultural growth in developing countries. This study examines the perceptions of farmers in Uganda on institutions and their roles in Sustainable Crop Intensification (SCI). Based on data collected from 135 rice and potato-producing households, farmers highly value institutional contributions to SCI. However, they perceive formal institutions as ineffective and consider informal farmer's institutions to be the most relevant for providing financial resources and meeting livelihood needs.
Weak and inefficient institutional arrangements have been identified as a major cause of the slow pace of agricultural growth in developing countries. Institutions - the humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction - play a significant role in Sustainable Crop Intensification (SCI) in Uganda. This study uses farmers' perceptions to assess institutions and their roles in SCI. We collected data from 135 rice and potato-producing households in Eastern and Southwestern regions of Uganda between January and February 2017. We used Focus Group Discussions to identify and categorize institutional typologies following which we asked households to evaluate several institutional aspects. Overall, institutional contributions to SCI were highly valued by farmers. Based on functional, organizational, and managerial obstacles, farmers perceived formal institutions to be ineffective while they perceived informal farmer's institutions to be the most relevant institutions as they provided financial resources that alleviated constraints to agricultural production and met livelihood needs. We found a lack of coordination between the micro, meso, and macro-level institutions, which then affected their institutional functionality to execute SCI. There is a need for innovation within existing institutions, and a status quo of institutional arrangements that would better respond to smallholders' needs.

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