Record Details

Kenya, Land Tenure, Agricultural Productivity and the Environment: Suba and Laikipia Districts, 2001

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Kenya, Land Tenure, Agricultural Productivity and the Environment: Suba and Laikipia Districts, 2001
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ENQB3A
 
Creator Paul Omondi Obunde
Cyrus M. Mbogo
Willis Oluoch Kosura
Agnes Wanza Kamoni
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description
The Land Tenure, Agricultural Productivity and the Environment: Suba and Laikipia Districts, Kenya, 2001 dataset accompanies a study that examines the relationships between the land tenure, agricultural productivity, and the environment in order to provide the necessary policy guidelines to the Government and other stakeholders. The study was carried out in two districts, Suba and Laikipia. It is believed that these two districts provide a wide range of tenure systems, cultural backgrounds a
nd agro-ecological diversities on which reasonable policy conclusions can be made.



Specific objectives of this study were:


•Establish the relationship between security of tenure and agricultural productivity;


•Identify and establish the link between security of tenure and investment in environmental conservation and soil fertility enhancement and maintenance;


•Establish the link between tenure system and environmental degradation; and


•Analyze gender relations, land tenure and productivity.


The dataset contains info
rmation on household characteristics such as household income, occupation, socioeconomic background, land characteristics such as parcel size, sale of land, security of access to land, and others including environmental degradation, conservation measures, hired labor, livestock ownership, infrastructure, and access to credit.




The survey was undertaken in 4 sub-locations per district. These were randomly selected from a cluster of 10 sub-locations in each district. Each of these clusters was expected to have almost the same agro-ecological conditions with a wide range of tenure systems. In each selected cluster, a list of the household heads were compiled. The target respondents were then randomly selected from this list. A total of 40 respondents was randomly selected from each cluster (sub-location).
 
Subject Agricultural Sciences
Earth and Environmental Sciences
Social Sciences
land tenure
environment
productivity
gender
women
Kenya
East Africa
Africa south of the Sahara
Africa
 
Language English
 
Date 2004
 
Contributor IFPRI-KM
 
Type sample survey data (ssd)