Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association

Agriculture forms the backbone of most African economies and as such it is subject to experimentation in a bid to improve it and gain more from it. The agricultural trajectory has an element of universalism despite its settings and this normally proves consequential to the developing countries as so...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muungani, Fadzai
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/2133
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905329026301952
author Muungani, Fadzai
author_facet Muungani, Fadzai
author_sort Muungani, Fadzai
collection DSpace
description Agriculture forms the backbone of most African economies and as such it is subject to experimentation in a bid to improve it and gain more from it. The agricultural trajectory has an element of universalism despite its settings and this normally proves consequential to the developing countries as some of the elements that make up its trajectory are not supported by other underlying reasons. It is the element of agricultural universalism that had most African countries adopt the Green Revolution and it is this very same reason that has perpetuated the adoption of the holistic approach to agriculture known as Organic farming. Since the mainstream idea is growth for farmers defined economically and general development that leads sustainability of livelihoods, it is no surprise that a systematic channel was incorporated into organic farming to achieve it. The Organic Value Chain is the systematic channel for growth within smallholder farmers and how it is governed and the milieu supporting and promoting its existence has a bearing on how things turn out for smallholder livelihoods and rural development in its entirety. HOFA was used as a case study to recognize and examine the role played by enabling environments and the players within them in impeding smallholder success through OVCs in Zimbabwe.
id ir-11408-2133
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Midlands State University
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-21332022-06-27T13:49:04Z Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association Muungani, Fadzai Agriculture Agriculture forms the backbone of most African economies and as such it is subject to experimentation in a bid to improve it and gain more from it. The agricultural trajectory has an element of universalism despite its settings and this normally proves consequential to the developing countries as some of the elements that make up its trajectory are not supported by other underlying reasons. It is the element of agricultural universalism that had most African countries adopt the Green Revolution and it is this very same reason that has perpetuated the adoption of the holistic approach to agriculture known as Organic farming. Since the mainstream idea is growth for farmers defined economically and general development that leads sustainability of livelihoods, it is no surprise that a systematic channel was incorporated into organic farming to achieve it. The Organic Value Chain is the systematic channel for growth within smallholder farmers and how it is governed and the milieu supporting and promoting its existence has a bearing on how things turn out for smallholder livelihoods and rural development in its entirety. HOFA was used as a case study to recognize and examine the role played by enabling environments and the players within them in impeding smallholder success through OVCs in Zimbabwe. 2017-06-22T15:52:02Z 2017-06-22T15:52:02Z 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/2133 en open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Agriculture
Muungani, Fadzai
Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title_full Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title_fullStr Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title_full_unstemmed Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title_short Effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in Zimbabwe: the case of Hwedza organic farmers association
title_sort effects of poor business enabling environments on the organic value chain in zimbabwe: the case of hwedza organic farmers association
topic Agriculture
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/2133
work_keys_str_mv AT muunganifadzai effectsofpoorbusinessenablingenvironmentsontheorganicvaluechaininzimbabwethecaseofhwedzaorganicfarmersassociation