Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation

"Shifting cultivation" - the alternation of periods of cropping with relatively long periods of fallow-encompasses many indigenous agricultural systems, developed in a remarkable diversity of environments throughout the tropics. When the fallow includes woody perennials, shifting cultivati...

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Published in:American Journal of Agricultural Economics
Main Author: Dvorak, K.A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81153
https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600
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spelling ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/81153 2023-10-29T02:36:44+01:00 Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation Dvorak, K.A. 2017-05-22T10:21:45Z 809-815 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81153 https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600 en eng Wiley Dvořàk, K.A. (1992). Resource management by West African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 74(3), 809-815. 0002-9092 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81153 https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600 Copyrighted; all rights reserved Limited Access American Journal of Agricultural Economics shifting cultivation resource management cropping clearing weeding fallows Journal Article 2017 ftcgiar https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600 2023-10-03T22:55:30Z "Shifting cultivation" - the alternation of periods of cropping with relatively long periods of fallow-encompasses many indigenous agricultural systems, developed in a remarkable diversity of environments throughout the tropics. When the fallow includes woody perennials, shifting cultivation is an agroforestry practice with temporal sequencing of agricultural crops and trees. The cultural, edaphic, ecological, and agronomic features of shifting cultivation systems have been studied in great detail (Conklin 1957, 1963; Nye and Greenland , Unesco, de Schlippe, Allan, Fresco). It has been established that in any agroecosystem the length of the cropping period and length of fallow period are key components of long-run stability. Although the pivotal role of labor for clearing and weeding in regulating the cycles of shifting cultivation has been repeatedly remarked (Conklin 1957, de Schlippe, Nye and Greenland , Jurion and Henry, Dabasi-Schweng) , the relationship between the labor economy of shifting cultivation and the cropping and fallow cycles has been neglected. Labor is the primary input in the vast majority of west African farming systems, and clearing and weeding operations account for most agricultural labor in almost all cases (Baldwin; Fresco; Guyer 1972, 1984). Clearing and weeding operations are central to the decision to mechanize (Pingali, Bigot, and Binswanger). Nevertheless , economists have looked elsewhere for explanations of land-use intensity in fallow-based systems (Stryker). In the present paper, a model of shifting cultivation is proposed based on the hypothesis that labor required for clearing and weeding are major determinants of the age of fallow to clear and length of time to crop. The model provides the economic complement to the cultural and biophysical mechanisms regulating allocation of human and natural resources in shifting and bushfallow agriculture . Most of the examples in this paper will be drawn from fallows with predominantly woody climax vegetation in humid and subhumid, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research) American Journal of Agricultural Economics 74 3 809 815
institution Open Polar
collection CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
op_collection_id ftcgiar
language English
topic shifting cultivation
resource management
cropping
clearing
weeding
fallows
spellingShingle shifting cultivation
resource management
cropping
clearing
weeding
fallows
Dvorak, K.A.
Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
topic_facet shifting cultivation
resource management
cropping
clearing
weeding
fallows
description "Shifting cultivation" - the alternation of periods of cropping with relatively long periods of fallow-encompasses many indigenous agricultural systems, developed in a remarkable diversity of environments throughout the tropics. When the fallow includes woody perennials, shifting cultivation is an agroforestry practice with temporal sequencing of agricultural crops and trees. The cultural, edaphic, ecological, and agronomic features of shifting cultivation systems have been studied in great detail (Conklin 1957, 1963; Nye and Greenland , Unesco, de Schlippe, Allan, Fresco). It has been established that in any agroecosystem the length of the cropping period and length of fallow period are key components of long-run stability. Although the pivotal role of labor for clearing and weeding in regulating the cycles of shifting cultivation has been repeatedly remarked (Conklin 1957, de Schlippe, Nye and Greenland , Jurion and Henry, Dabasi-Schweng) , the relationship between the labor economy of shifting cultivation and the cropping and fallow cycles has been neglected. Labor is the primary input in the vast majority of west African farming systems, and clearing and weeding operations account for most agricultural labor in almost all cases (Baldwin; Fresco; Guyer 1972, 1984). Clearing and weeding operations are central to the decision to mechanize (Pingali, Bigot, and Binswanger). Nevertheless , economists have looked elsewhere for explanations of land-use intensity in fallow-based systems (Stryker). In the present paper, a model of shifting cultivation is proposed based on the hypothesis that labor required for clearing and weeding are major determinants of the age of fallow to clear and length of time to crop. The model provides the economic complement to the cultural and biophysical mechanisms regulating allocation of human and natural resources in shifting and bushfallow agriculture . Most of the examples in this paper will be drawn from fallows with predominantly woody climax vegetation in humid and subhumid, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dvorak, K.A.
author_facet Dvorak, K.A.
author_sort Dvorak, K.A.
title Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
title_short Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
title_full Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
title_fullStr Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
title_full_unstemmed Resource management by west African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
title_sort resource management by west african farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81153
https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source American Journal of Agricultural Economics
op_relation Dvořàk, K.A. (1992). Resource management by West African farmers and the economics of shifting cultivation. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 74(3), 809-815.
0002-9092
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81153
https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600
op_rights Copyrighted; all rights reserved
Limited Access
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2307/1242600
container_title American Journal of Agricultural Economics
container_volume 74
container_issue 3
container_start_page 809
op_container_end_page 815
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