Traditional and Western knowledge systems used by smallholders: Harnessing synergies for improved household food security in rural Ghana
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Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography
Abstract
The discourse on knowledge integration persists in research and development practice. The need
for traditional and Western knowledge systems to work together to achieve sustainable
agricultural development in Ghana’s rural areas has become evermore relevant to achieve
household food security in the context of changing climate, declining soil fertility, and labour
challenges. The authors examined the role of knowledge integration in shaping the food
security outcomes of socially differentiated smallholders’ households in Kassena-Nankana
Municipal District and the Kassena-Nankana West District in the Upper East Region of Ghana,
where food insecurity prevalence is very high. Using mixed methods approach, they found that
most low resource endowed households that were unable to combine traditional and Western
farming methods were more likely to experience food insecurity than were other households.
Farmers with higher resource endowments integrated knowledges from both traditional and
Western systems leading to better yield outcomes. However, combining both knowledge
systems did not guarantee automatic success due to intervening factors. The authors conclude
that different categories of smallholders’ resource endowment significantly impacts the
smallholders’ food security status, and recommend that policy and development programming
should promote integration of traditional and Western farming knowledge systems to achieve
sustainable food crop production.
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Research Article
Citation
To cite this article: Michael Pervarah, Joseph A. Yaro & Emmanuel K. Derbile (2023) Traditional and Western knowledge systems used by smallholders: Harnessing synergies for improved household food security in rural Ghana, Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography, 77:5, 296-309, DOI: 10.1080/00291951.2023.2289516
