The determinants of grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change in Dodoma-Tanzania

dc.contributor.authorMahenge, Felix Y.
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-24T10:27:30Z
dc.date.available2020-11-24T10:27:30Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.descriptionFull text article. Also available at http://eajssh.sua.ac.tz:9093/index.php/EAJSSH/article/view/27en_US
dc.description.abstractThe socio-economic livelihoods of grapevine farmers can partly be improved through their ability to avert the impacts of climate change circumventing grapevine production. Grapevine farmers’ ability to cope with climate change is determined by the application of adaptation strategies which minimize impacts on grapevine production. However, the influence of grapevine production factors on grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change is not well known. This compelled to carry out a study on key factors of grapevine production and their influence on grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change in Dodoma, Tanzania. Cross-sectional research design and mixed research approaches were adopted. Purposive and random sampling procedures were employed. Data were collected through a questionnaire survey, focus group discussions, interviews, observations, and documents review. Quantitative data were analysed using IBM-SPSS software while the qualitative data were analysed through content analysis. Findings showed that grapevine famer’s adaptive capacity to climate change was mainly determined by the farmers’ access to: skills on grapevine production and adaptation, financial capital, water sources, land ownership, market, and grapevine production infrastructure. Farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change was observed promising by family land ownership, availability of Agricultural Research Institute (ARI)-Makutupora, and Microfinance Institutions, and existence of other sources of income. Farmers’ adaptive capacity was affected by inadequate skills on grapevine production and adaptation by the Agricultural Extension Officers (AEOs), unreliable grapevine market with more petty traders buying grapevines at low prices, unreliable rainfall, and poor grapevine infrastructure. This informs the agriculture policy makers to address these aspects that influence grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change. It is recommended that: Central Government (CG) and local Governments (LG) should train the AEOs on grapevine production, LG should facilitate farmers to join SACOSS, and CG and LG should improve grapevine infrastructure.en_US
dc.identifier.citationMahenge, F. Y. (2020). The determinants of grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change in Dodoma-Tanzania. The East African Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 1(2), 86-96.en_US
dc.identifier.issn2619-8894
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2537
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherSokoine University of Agricultureen_US
dc.subjectAdaptive capacityen_US
dc.subjectClimate changeen_US
dc.subjectGrapevine farmersen_US
dc.subjectGrapevine productionen_US
dc.subjectGrapevineen_US
dc.subjectGrapevine marketen_US
dc.subjectGrapevine infrastructureen_US
dc.subjectPolicy makersen_US
dc.subjectGrapevine agronomyen_US
dc.subjectDodomaen_US
dc.titleThe determinants of grapevine farmers’ adaptive capacity to climate change in Dodoma-Tanzaniaen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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