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Main Title Community Seed Production Sustainability in Rice-Wheat Farming [electronic resource] /
Type EBOOK
Author Khanal, Narayan Prasad.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Maharjan, Keshav Lall.
Publisher Springer Japan : Imprint: Springer,
Year Published 2015
Call Number S1-S972
ISBN 9784431554745
Subjects Life sciences ; Agriculture ; Soil conservation ; Sustainable development ; Microeconomics ; Farm economics
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-55474-5
Collation XX, 177 p. 37 illus., 28 illus. in color. online resource.
Notes Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes 1 Rice-Wheat Farming at a Glance -- 2 Fundamentals of Community Seed Production -- 3 A Framework for Analyzing Sustainability of Community Seed Production -- 4 Farmers' Behavior in Buying Rice and Wheat Seed from Market -- 5 Technical Efficiency in Rice and Wheat Seed Production -- 6 Profit Efficiency in Seed Production under Rice-Wheat Farming -- 7 Households' Behavior in Selling Rice and Wheat Seed in The Market -- 8 Adoption of Soil Conservation Practices in Rice-Wheat -- Farming -- 9 Risk Management in Community Seed Production under Rice-Wheat Cropping System -- 10 Organizational Governance and its Relationship to Household-Level Economic Indicators: Evidence from Community Seed Production -- 11 Institutionalization of Community Seed Production. This book analyzes the sustainability of community seed production under a rice-wheat farming system from microeconomic perspectives, considering how seed producers benefit from community seed production and how those benefits continue into the future. Seed producers' performance in resource management, governance, and marketing strategies indicates current benefits, whereas soil conservation and risk-management practices provide the basis for future benefits. Community seed production is a local-level seed management system owned by farmers. This system provides the institutional mechanism to supply diversified seed demands of open-pollinated varieties of food crops in a cost-effective way in rural regions. Being able to address the concerns of food insecurity, poverty, climate stress, and biodiversity loss in programs and policies of development agencies, community seed production is gaining popularity among the farmers and the policy makers in developing countries. This book discusses the issues of organizational governance of the community seed producers' groups and links them with household-level benefits to understand the organizational dynamism and the probable development paths of such organizations in the future. It also highlights the necessity to institutionalize lessons learned in community seed production in the stakeholders' programs and policies. These understandings provide a basis for formulating policies for strengthening the system in developing countries. Students, researchers, policy makers, and donor agencies working with CSP in the developing world will find this book useful in broadening their understanding of CSP in general and its sustainability in particular.
Place Published Tokyo
Corporate Au Added Ent SpringerLink (Online service)
Host Item Entry Springer eBooks
PUB Date Free Form 2015
BIB Level m
Medium computer
Content text
Carrier online resource
Cataloging Source OCLC/T
OCLC Time Stamp 20150508022818
Language eng
Origin SPRINGER
Type EBOOK
OCLC Rec Leader 04168nam a22005055i 45