Persistent Identifier
|
doi:10.7910/DVN/J31LJT |
Publication Date
|
2019-12-20 |
Title
| 2017- CSA Monitoring: Lawra-Jirapa Climate-Smart Village (Ghana) |
Author
| Bonilla-Findji, OsanaInternational Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFSORCID0000-0002-6098-000X
Eitzinger, AntonInternational Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIATORCID0000-0001-7317-3381
Andrieu, NadineCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement – CIRADORCID0000-0001-9558-9302
Jarvis, AndyInternational Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFSORCID0000-0001-6543-0798
Ouedraogo, MathieuClimate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFS; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics - ICRISATORCID0000-0001-6581-6287
Zougmoré, RobertClimate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFS; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics - ICRISATORCID0000-0002-6215-4852
Nyuor, Anslem B.CSIR Savanna Agricultural Research Institute - SARI
Saaka Buah, SamuelCSIR Savanna Agricultural Research Institute - SARI |
Point of Contact
|
Use email button above to contact.
Ouedraogo, Mathieu (Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFS; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics - ICRISAT)
Bonilla-Findji, Osana (International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security – CCAFS) |
Description
| This dataset contains the files produced in the pilot implementation of the “Integrated Monitoring Framework for Climate-Smart Agriculture” in the Lawra-Jirapa Climate Smart Village (Ghana) in October 2017. This monitoring framework developed by CCAFS is meant to be deployed annually across the global network of Climate-Smart Villages to gather field-based evidence by tracking the progress on:
- Adoption of CSA practices and technologies, as well as access to climate information services and
- Their related impacts at household level and farm level <\ul>
The CSA framework allows to address three key research questions:
- Who within each CSV community adopts which CSA technologies and practices and which are their motivations, enabling factors? To which extent farmers access and use climate information services? <>
- Which are the gender-disaggregated perceived effects of CSA options on farmers’ livelihood, agricultural, food security and adaptive capacity, and on key gender dimensions (participation in decision making, participation in CSA implementation and dis-adoption, control and access over resources and labour).
- Which are the CSA performance, synergies and trade-offs found at farm level?
This CSA framework proposes a small set of standard Core Indicators linked to the research questions, and Extended indicators covering aspects related to the enabling environment.
At household level (17 Core indicators):
- 7 Core Uptake indicators (they track CSA Implementation and adoption drivers; CSA dis-adoption and drivers; Access to climate information services and agro-advisories, Capacity to use them and constraining factors).
- 10 Core Outcome indicators (they track farmers perceptions on the effects of CSA practices on their Livelihoods, Food Security and Adaptive Capacity and on Gender dimensions.
Those include namely: CSA effect on yield/production, on Income, on Improved Food Access and Food Diversity, on Vulnerability to weather related shocks and on Changes in agricultural activities induced by access to climate information. Four are Gender related Outcome indicators (Decision-making on CSA implementation or dis-adoption, Participation in CSA implementation, CSA effect on labor, Decision making and control on CSA generated income).
- An additional set of complementary Extended indicators allows to determine and track changes in enabling conditions and farmers characteristics such as: Livelihood security, Financial enablers, Food security, Frecuency of climate events, Coping strategies, Risk Mitigation Actions, Access to financial services and Training, CSA Knowledge and Learning.
At farm level, 7 CORE indicators:
- 7 Core indicators are used to determine the CSA performance of the farms as well as synergies and trade-offs among the three pillars (productivity, adaptation and mitigation, via farm model analysis).
This integrated framework is associated with a cost-effective data collection App (Geofarmer) that allowed capturing information in almost real time. The survey questionnaire is structured around different thematic modules (Demographic, Livelihoods, Food Security, Climate events, Climate Services, CSA practices, Financial Services) connected to standard CSA metrics and the specific indicators.
|
Subject
| Earth and Environmental Sciences; Agricultural Sciences |
Keyword
| Monitoring (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4911
Climate Smart Agriculture (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1361789093890
Households (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3676
Livelihoods (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1374498089962
Farm
Adaptation (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_117
Food Security (AGROVOC) http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_10967
Climate Shocks
West Africa (CIAT Region)
Decision and Policy Analysis - DAPA (CIAT Research Area) |
Related Publication
| Kristjanson P, Garlick C, Cramer L, Förch W, Thornton PK Ngungu A. 2014. Global Summary of Baseline Household Survey Results. Version 2. CCAFS Working Paper no. 56. CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). Copenhagen, Denmark. Available online at: www.ccafs.cgiar.org handle 10568/16426 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/16426 |
Notes
| Universe: At the time of data collection, all survey participants resided within 7 communities in Lawra Jirapa Village, Ghana (Baazu, Bompari, Doggoh, Jeffiri, Kulkarni, Oribili or Tuori). Implementation was carried out by locally trained enumerators using the Geofarmer Smart Monitoring App for data collection. A total of 357 farmers were interviewed, consisting of 103 adult females and 137 adult males (age 35 or above), 65 young females and 52 young males (under 35). Where possible, two and one young person were surveyed from each household. |
Language
| English |
Producer
| International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) / CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security |
Funding Information
| CCAFS Flagship 2 Climate Smart Technologies and Practices funds 2017; CCAFS West Africa program funds 2017: G135 |
Depositor
| Ortega, Angelly |
Deposit Date
| 2019-12-18 |
Time Period
| Start Date: 2016-11-01; End Date: 2017-10-01 |
Date of Collection
| Start Date: 2017-10-01; End Date: 2017-11-15 |
Data Type
| Survey data; Socio-economic Data; Geographic Data; Environmental Data; Capacity Building |
Related Material
|
- GHA-LAW Cleaned anonymized responses M0-M5
- GHA-LAW Additional information:
- 2017_WA GHA Lawra-Jirapa Questionnaire Codified
- 2017_WA_GHA-LAW_CCAFS _Survey_Questions_TREE
- 2017_WA_GHA-LAW_Glossary_Main_CSA_practices
- 2017_WA_GHA-LAW_Inform_Consents
- 2017_WA_GHA-LAW_Comments_data_cleaning_anonim
- Minimum Risk Review Application_ME for IDRC_20180628
- IRB Approval Letter_CSA_perf - extension 2019
- 2017 WA GHN LAW_CSA Monitoring Results
|
Other Reference
| https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/WQALYL; https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/IUJQZV; https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/Q7PKLN |