Your search found 4 records
1 2004. Sustainable family farming and role of agricultural cooperatives: Report of the 26th RECA Seminar, Tokyo, Japan, 20 July – 1 August 2004. Chanakyapuri, India: Afro-Asian Rural Development Organization. 234p.
Family farms ; Cooperatives ; Households ; Food security ; Marketing / Japan / India / Bangladesh / Egypt / Ethiopia / Ghana / Jordan / Korea / Malaysia / Mauritius / Morocco / Nigeria / Oman / Syria / Yemen
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 630 G000 SUS Record No: H037382)

2 Diarra, M.; Monimart, M. 2006. Landless women, hopless women?: Gender, land and decentralisation in Niger. London, UK: IIED. 49p. (IIED Issue Paper No.143)
Rural women ; Land ownership ; Land tenure ; Land management ; Decentralization ; Family farms ; Poverty ; Natural resources management ; Gender ; Woman’s status ; Leadership / Niger
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 305.4 G212 DIA Record No: H034846)

3 van Koppen, Barbara. 2009. Gender, resource rights, and wetland rice productivity in Burkina Faso. In Kirsten, J. F.; Dorward, A. R.; Poulton, C.; Vink, N. (Eds.). Institutional economics perspectives on African agricultural development. Washington, DC, USA: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). pp.389-407.
Gender ; Households ; Women ; Labor ; Property rights ; Farming systems ; Family farms ; Development projects ; Project design ; Wetlands ; Rice ; Productivity ; Case studies / Burkina Faso / Comoe Province
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 338.1 G100 KIR Record No: H042343)
http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/oc61abr_0.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H042343.pdf
(0.25 MB)

4 Wang, Y.; Zeng, X. 2023. Evaluation of the willingness and behavior of family farm water resource financing based on the internet of things SEM [Structural Equation Modeling] model. Water Supply, 23(7):2907-2918. [doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2023.157]
Water resources ; Family farms ; Financing ; Water shortages ; Sustainable development ; Households ; Monitoring ; Agricultural production ; Models ; Government ; Policies ; Water quality
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H052285)
https://iwaponline.com/ws/article-pdf/23/7/2907/1279171/ws023072907.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H052285.pdf
(0.40 MB) (412 KB)
At present, China's rural water resources are in short supply and the water pollution situation is severe. Family farms are an important part of China's agricultural modernization, and their development level is an important indicator to measure the degree of modernization of a country and a region. The application of agricultural Internet of Things technology in the field of agriculture is helpful for solving the problem of water shortage in family farms in water shortage areas. Based on questionnaire data, this paper used structural equation modeling (SEM) to study the relationship between family farm water financing willingness and behavior. The results showed that the standardization coefficients of Assumption 1, Assumption 2 and Assumption 3 were 0.332, 0.267 and 0.311, respectively. It can be seen that the water resource financing willingness of family farms was greatly affected by their water-saving technology ability, water management ability and government policy support. However, the standardization coefficient of Assumption 5 was 0.087. It can be seen that the water management capacity had no significant impact on the water resource financing behavior, and the water resource financing behavior of family farms was mainly affected by their water-saving technical capacity and government policy support.

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