New extension methods to speed up diffusion of agricultural innovations
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Date
10-11-12Author
Schonherr, Siegfried
Mbugua, Erastus S.
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Schonherr, Siegfried and Mbugua, Erastus S. (1974) New extension methods to speed up diffusion of agricultural innovations. Discussion Paper 200, Nairobi: Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobihttp://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/123456789/602
318149
Publisher
Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobi
Subject
AgricultureDescription
This paper is based on field experiments carried out by researchers
at the University of Nairobi's Institute for Development Studies in collaboration
with Kenya District Agricultural Offices. The research has aimed at
developing more efficient methods for stimulating diffusion of agricultural
innovations and at the same time reducing the dualistic pattern of rural development
.
The governments of many developing countries have based their
agricultural extension services on the diffusion theory of E.M. Rogers
(Diffusion of Innovation, New York, Free Press, 1962), directing their efforts
to the 'most progressive' farmers, with the expectation that the adoption of
innovations would trickle down to the majority of farmers -- the 'less progressive'.
Yet many researchers and planners have realised that under conditions
of dualistic development agricultural innovations are rarely communicated in
this direction, and furthermore, when extension efforts are directed towards
the most progressive farmers the division in rural society is actually
aggravated. Thus researchers and politicians in Kenya have sought alternative
approaches to agricultural extension which will reach the majority of farmers
without requiring a greatly expanded level of investment
The research has shown that in a situation of dualistic rural
development communications from more progressive farmers to less progressive
farmers tend to break down. However, there is intense communication of
agricultural innovations among farmers on the same or similar level of progressiveness,
and more progressive farmers also readily adopt innovations from
less progressive farmers if they perceive that it is to their advantage. Thus
diffusion is maximised when innovations are introduced through less progressive
farmers, even though it is more difficult to make less progressive farmers
successful first adopters of an innovation.
This paper reports on experiments carried out within the government
extension organisation to find out how this can be done. The results are
considered clearly encouraging.
Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobi