dc.description.abstract | Agro-industries catalyse rural development in areas with abundant agricultural raw materials, making these industries popular in poverty reduction. These industries create demand for inputs in the farm from other sectors, requiring deliberate planning, but it is not always the case, even in countries that have devolved planning functions. The "Nyandarua District Integrated Regional Plan (NDIRP)" and "Nyandarua County Integrated Regional Plan (NCIRP) 2, 2018-2022" were inventoried for data on planning for agro-industries in Kinangop sub-county. The District Integrated Plan and the County Integrated Plan had 15 and 29 agro-industrial planning interventions in five areas of action planning, respectively. The planning interventions in the district-integrated plan were disaggregated to the sub-county around four regional strategies and the five areas of action planning. This makes the plan more resourceful in planning for agro-industries compared to the County Integrated Plan. Data on social characteristics, agricultural production, and marketing and data on the location and sighting of six agro-industries were inventoried from a study report on planning for agro-industries in the sub-county. Over 80% of respondents grow potatoes, cabbages, carrots, maize, and snow peas; and rear dairy cows to produce milk for their own consumption and surplus for the market. Myriad challenges, including exploitation by middlemen and lack of appropriate land sites for agro-industries, undermine the agricultural production efforts of the farmers and the development of agro-industries. The article recommends planning for agro-industries that disaggregates strategies and areas of action planning to sub-county level or below to address location and site accessibility needs of agro-industries as a norm of territorial rural development. | en_US |
dc.subject | Area of action planning, interventions, agro-industries, agro-processing, smallholder farmer, sub-county*Corresponding author:Isaac K. Mwangi, Associate Professor, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Faculty of the Built Environment and Design, University of Nairobi, Kenya.Email: imkaranja@uonbi.ac.ke ISSN: 2524-1354 (Online), ISSN: 2519-7851 (Print)Africa Habitat Review JournalVolume 17 Issue 1 (December, 2022http://uonjournals.uonbi.ac.ke/ojs/index.php/ahrINTRODUCTIONAgro-industries catalyse rural development in areas with abundant agricultural raw materials, making the industries popular in poverty reduction strategies. The industries also create demand for inputs in the farm from other sectors. Deliberate planning for agro-industries is necessary. However, this is not the case even in countries like Kenya that have devolved planning to sub-national units of governance and territorial development (Chimhowu et al., 2019). Planning for agro-industries to serve adjoining rural hinterland and prioritize the needs of Small-Holder Farmers is an effective rural development strategy (Zhang, 2021). This perspective rests on the notion that planning enhances the delivery of agricultural services; and also mainstreams access to raw materials, and aligns and fosters agro-processing in diversifying livelihoods. Views that agriculture is the source of livelihood for 75% of the world population living below Ksh 222 a day and competing for raw materials with other sectors no longer hold (Fatah, 2007). Agriculture has evolved into a critical source of food and income, on-farm and off-farm employment for smallholder households while generating gross domestic product (GDP) from trade in agro-industrial products. The devolution of planning functions and responsibilities for the delivery of agricultural services to counties in Kenya was underpinned in the Constitution of Kenya (KC) 2010 (Kenya, 2010). Popular political participation of grassroots communities in the counties was legislated to operationalize democratic principles in planning. However, planning for agro-industries to utilize | en_US |