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  4. Socio-Economic Determinants of Climate-Smart Agriculture Adoption: A Novel Perspective from Agritourism Farmers in Nigeria
 
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Socio-Economic Determinants of Climate-Smart Agriculture Adoption: A Novel Perspective from Agritourism Farmers in Nigeria

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2025
Author
Kanu Ifeanyi Moses
Przezbórska-Skobiej, Lucyna 
Faculty
Wydział Ekonomiczny
PBN discipline
economics and finance
Journal
Sustainability
ISSN
2071-1050
DOI
10.3390/su17125521
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/17/12/5521
Volume
17
Number
12
Pages from-to
art. 5521
Abstract (EN)
The existing body of scholarly work on the adoption of Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) in Africa and Nigeria has predominantly concentrated on the experiences and practices of smallholder farmers. While these studies offer valuable insights into the general factors that influence the adoption of CSA practices, their findings may not be fully applicable to the burgeoning agritourism farmers in Nigeria. This study presents a novel perspective on the socio-economic determinants of CSA adoption among the nascent agritourism farmers in Nigeria. The data were collected through a well-structured questionnaire administered to 436 agritourism farmers in Nigeria. The five mutually inclusive endogenous variables that capture the impact of CSA practices were agroforestry system, improved livestock management, organic farming, crop rotation/intercropping, and farmer field schools. While the agritourism farmers possess moderate experience and education, significant gaps exist in access to critical resources like credit, climate information, extension services, and membership in agritourism cooperatives/associations. The multivariate probit (MVP) model revealed that agritourism farming experience significantly boosts crop rotation/intercropping adoption. Education enhances organic farming uptake but negatively impacts improved livestock management. Similarly, extension services access promotes farmer field schools while discouraging organic farming. Significant negative covariance matrix between CSA practices suggests overlapping demands for limited farm resources.
Keywords (EN)
  • climate-smart agriculture (CSA)

  • agritourism farmers

  • socio-economic variables

  • multivariate probit (MVP) model

  • South–South zone Nigeria

  • South–East zone Nigeria

  • climate change adoption

  • CSA practices

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
June 16, 2025
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