Record Details

Pearl Millet Technology Adoption and Impact Study in Maharashtra

ICRISAT Dataverse Dataverse OAI Archive

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title Pearl Millet Technology Adoption and Impact Study in Maharashtra
 
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/11038/10190
 
Creator Kumara Charyulu D
Moses Davala
Cynthia Bantilan
Borikar S T
Mohan Rao Y
Rai KN
Gupta SK
 
Publisher International Crop Research Institute for Semi Arid Tropics
 
Date 2014-09
 
Subject Pearl millet
Adoption Study
 
Description The comprehensive analysis of adoption and impact in this study used the survey data to address farm level responses with respect to diffusion, adoption, dis-adoption, input use, crop management and unit cost reduction in Pearl millet production. It is aimed at any inter-linked issues in technology adoption, emerging collective or group action to capture economies of scale, agricultural intensification and commercialization. The quantitative analysis showcases the impact of Pearl millet improved technology in Maharashtra with understanding of the underlying socio-economic, institutional and policy drivers for technology adoption and enhanced household welfare. The main message from the comprehensive analysis is that significant research benefits have been achieved from the wide adoption of short duration improved Peal millet varieties in the rainfed regions of Maharashtra in India.
Citation: Kumara Charyulu D; Moses Davala; Cynthia Bantilan; Borikar S T; Mohan Rao Y; Rai KN; Gupta SK, 2014-09, "Pearl Millet Technology Adoption and Impact Study in Maharashtra ", http://hdl.handle.net/11038/10190 International Crop Research Institute for Semi Arid Tropics [Distributor] V2 [Version]
 
Coverage Time Period Covered: 2012 - 2013
Date of Collection: 2013-07 - 2013-08
Country/Nation: India
Geographic Coverage: Maharashtra
Geographic Unit: Mandal
 
Type Survey data
 
Rights By using this website and any of the materials made available through it, you agree to abide by the Terms of Use of ICRISAT Dataverse. The datasets and documents in this study are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License
.