Browsing by Author "Dina Nabasumba"
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Item Gender Dilemma of Small-Scale Farmers in Improving Household Income through an Agro Enterprise Development: A Case of Tea Growing Farm Households in Uganda(Open Access Library Journal, 2024-03-29) Robert Muzira; Dina Nabasumba; Stephen Natuha; Joseph OkelloThe agricultural sector is the most dominant in Uganda’s economy. It’s a main avenue the government uses to improve household food, nutrition and income security. Tea is one of the main cash crops and export commodities after coffee and fish. Tea was promoted both in traditional and emerging districts as a commodity, which smallholder farmers could use to improve house- hold income. The study was carried out to assess: 1) farmers’ capacity building in tea production; 2) tea leaf yields in wet and dry seasons on farm; 3) farmers’ strategies in marketing tea leaves; and 4) factors that led to changes in green tea yields over time. It was revealed that there was high disproportion capacity building of male and female headed households. This was highly due to gender issues and concerns, which could not favor female headed households. There was low productivity of tea bushes due to limited use of improved agricultural innovations related to soil fertility improvement and conservation. Low productivity of tea bushes was a disincentive to household poverty alleviation and undermined government’s efforts of alleviating household poverty.Item Gender Dilemma of Small-Scale Farmers in Improving Household Income through an Agro Enterprise Development: A Case of Tea Growing Farm Households in Uganda(Open Access Library Journal, 2024-03-29) Robert Muzira; Dina Nabasumba; Stephen Natuha; Joseph OkelloThe agricultural sector is the most dominant in Uganda’s economy. It’s a main avenue the government uses to improve household food, nutrition and income security. Tea is one of the main cash crops and export commodities after coffee and fish. Tea was promoted both in traditional and emerging dis- tricts as a commodity, which smallholder farmers could use to improve house- hold income. The study was carried out to assess: 1) farmers’ capacity build- ing in tea production; 2) tea leaf yields in wet and dry seasons on farm; 3) farmers’ strategies in marketing tea leaves; and 4) factors that led to changes in green tea yields over time. It was revealed that there was high disproportion capacity building of male and female headed households. This was highly due to gender issues and concerns, which could not favor female headed house- holds. There was low productivity of tea bushes due to limited use of improved agricultural innovations related to soil fertility improvement and conservation. Low productivity of tea bushes was a disincentive to household poverty alleviation and undermined government’s efforts of alleviating household poverty.Item Gender Dilemma of Small-Scale Farmers in Improving Household Income through an Agro Enterprise Development: A Case of Tea Growing Farm Households in Uganda(Open Access Library Journal, 2024-03-29) Robert Muzira; Dina Nabasumba; Stephen Natuha; Joseph OkelloThe agricultural sector is the most dominant in Uganda’s economy. It’s a main avenue the government uses to improve household food, nutrition and income security. Tea is one of the main cash crops and export commodities after coffee and fish. Tea was promoted both in traditional and emerging dis- tricts as a commodity, which smallholder farmers could use to improve house- hold income. The study was carried out to assess: 1) farmers’ capacity build- ing in tea production; 2) tea leaf yields in wet and dry seasons on farm; 3) farmers’ strategies in marketing tea leaves; and 4) factors that led to changes in green tea yields over time. It was revealed that there was high disproportion capacity building of male and female headed households. This was highly due to gender issues and concerns, which could not favor female headed house- holds. There was low productivity of tea bushes due to limited use of improved agricultural innovations related to soil fertility improvement and conservation. Low productivity of tea bushes was a disincentive to household poverty alleviation and undermined government’s efforts of alleviating household poverty.Item Understanding Gendered Tea Production Characteristics and Trends under Smallholder Farming Systems in South-Western Uganda(Open Access Library Journal, 2023-04-19) Robert Muzira; Dina Nabasumba; Stephen Natuha; Joseph OkelloTea production is one of the main sources of household income in south- western Uganda and contributes to foreign exchange earnings of the country. Tea production is dominated by small-scale farmers who supply fresh tea leaves to processing plants. The government of Uganda has been promoting tea production in traditional tea districts and expanding its production in new areas in effort to alleviate rural household poverty. The objective of this study was to assess tea production trends and the potential to benefit gendered households involved in its production in south-western Uganda. The study revealed that tea production increased in the last decade through the government’s intervention in supplying free seedlings to farmers, strengthening extension system and supporting the establishment of private processing plants in tea-growing areas. However, it appeared that male-headed house- holds opened up more land for tea production and were further getting support in form of improved tea clones and mineral fertilizers on credit from processing plants compared to their female-headed counterparts. Gender inequality, particularly in terms of access to and use of resources, particularly land, is the main obstacle that prevents female-headed households from in- creasing tea production and productivity as a means of reducing household poverty.