Soil health and grain yield impacts of climate resilient agriculture projects: Evidence from southern Malawi
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Details
- Title
- Soil health and grain yield impacts of climate resilient agriculture projects: Evidence from southern Malawi
- Creators
- Festus O Amadu (Corresponding Author) - University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignPaul E. Mcnamara (Contributor) - University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignKristin E. Davis (Contributor) - International Food Policy Research Institute
- Publication Details
- Agricultural systems, Vol.193, 103230
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Number of pages
- 14
- Awards
- National Institute of Food & Agriculture Hatch project, 1009327, United States Department of Agriculture (United States, Washington) - USDAStrengthening Agriculture & Nutrition Extension project, AID-612-LA-15-00003),, United States Agency for International Development (United States, Washington) - USAIDBorlaug Leadership Enhancement in Agriculture Program, 016258-128, United States Agency for International Development (United States, Washington) - USAID
- Grant note
- USAID through the Strengthening Agriculture and Nutrition Extension Activity: AID-612-LA-15-00003 Norman Borlaug LEAP Fellowship: 016258-128
Authors gratefully acknowledge funding from USAID through the Strengthening Agriculture and Nutrition Extension Activity (Grant number AID-612-LA-15-00003, 2015) and Norman Borlaug LEAP Fellowship (Grant number 016258-128, 2015). We thank the editor, Jagadish Timsina and three anonymous referees for helpful comments that significantly improved this paper. We also thank Daniel Miller and Richard Brazee, Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for feedback on earlier drafts. Thanks to the International Food Policy Research Institute staff in Malawi for comments on a preliminary data in 2016. Comments from participants at the 3rd Global Food Security Conference in Cape Town, South Africa in December 2017, and the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association in Chicago Illinois, August 2017, are gratefully acknowledged. We thank Chitedze Agricultural Research Institute in Malawi for analyzing the soil samples for this research. We appreciate our team of enumerators for their outstanding efforts with data collection. Special thanks to Catholic Relief Services in Malawi and other WALA consortium members like Total Land Care and Chikwawa Diocese for providing contextual support.
- Identifiers
- 99385798193706570
- Copyright
- © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Academic Unit
- Department of Ecology & Environmental Studies
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article