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Commercialisation, women’s empowerment and poverty reduction: APRA outcome indicators papers

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posted on 2023-06-10, 00:40 authored by Colin Poulton, Ephraim Chirwa, Rachel Sabates-WheelerRachel Sabates-Wheeler, Amrita SahaAmrita Saha, Julia Compton, Steve Wiggins, Helen DancerHelen Dancer, Naomi Hossain, Carlos Oya
Much of the debate about agricultural commercialisation offers simplistic, dichotomous comparisons between, for example, large and small-scale farming, or export-oriented and domestic markets. There is often an assumption that there is one ideal type of commercialisation that can be realised through investment and policy intervention. Yet in practice, there are diverse ways that different people engage with processes of agricultural commercialisation along value chains, from production to processing to marketing. This range of pathways will have both risks and benefits for different groups of people, often differentiated by gender. Our research will examine the consequences of different types of commercialisation, contrasting, for example, smallholder, contract farming and large-estate arrangements, and pathways of commercialisation, examining commercialisation over time and the outcomes for different people. A comparative research design, across six countries and between different cropping/livestock systems, will enable the APRA Programme to draw out wider recommendations that will help inform and guide investment and policy decisions around agricultural commercialisation in Africa into the future. In practical research terms, the agenda described above requires that a range of indicators are specified in relation to our five main outcome areas. This document compiles five separate papers, each one reviewing the established literature on a specific outcome area and then providing a justification for the proposed indicators to be applied in the APRA studies.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Publisher

Agricultural Policy Research in Africa Research Programme/Future Agricultures Consortium

Page range

1-72

Pages

72.0

Place of publication

Brighton

Department affiliated with

  • Law Publications

Institution

IDS

Full text available

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2021-08-23

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2021-08-23

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2021-08-23

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