• Home
  • Themes
    • All Themes
    • China and Brazil in African Agriculture
    • Land
    • Pathways to Commercialisation
    • Climate Change
    • Growth and Social Protection
    • Young People & Agrifood
    • Science, Technology and Innovation
    • Irrigation
    • Gender & Social Difference
    • Pastoralism
    • China and Brazil in African Agriculture
    • Policy Processes
  • Projects
    • All Projects
    • Commercialisation of Land and ‘Land Grabbing’
    • Integrated Seed Sector Development in Africa
    • Land and Agricultural Commercialisation in Africa (LACA) project
    • Malawi’s input subsidies
    • Political Economy of Agricultural Policy in Africa (PEAPA)
    • Space, Markets and Employment
    • APRA
    • Zimbabwe’s Land Reform
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Policy
    • Policy Engagements
    • Network & Communications
    • Impact Stories
    • Policy Dialogue
    • CAADP
  • Blog
  • About
    • About FAC
    • About FAC Core Countries
  • Apra
Future agricultures
  • Home
  • Themes
    • All Themes
    • China and Brazil in African Agriculture
    • Land
    • Pathways to Commercialisation
    • Climate Change
    • Growth and Social Protection
    • Young People & Agrifood
    • Science, Technology and Innovation
    • Irrigation
    • Gender & Social Difference
    • Pastoralism
    • China and Brazil in African Agriculture
    • Policy Processes
  • Projects
    • All Projects
    • Commercialisation of Land and ‘Land Grabbing’
    • Integrated Seed Sector Development in Africa
    • Land and Agricultural Commercialisation in Africa (LACA) project
    • Malawi’s input subsidies
    • Political Economy of Agricultural Policy in Africa (PEAPA)
    • Space, Markets and Employment
    • APRA
    • Zimbabwe’s Land Reform
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Policy
    • Policy Engagements
    • Network & Communications
    • Impact Stories
    • Policy Dialogue
    • CAADP
  • Blog
  • About
    • About FAC
    • About FAC Core Countries
  • Apra
×

SRI


Latest articles

How SRI technology and irrigation has transformed Anita’s life
April 23, 2020 / APRA blog FAC blog
This blog is closely linked to Working Paper 30: Does Rice Commercialisation Impact on Livelihood? Experience from Mngeta in Kilombero District, Tanzania. Access it, for free, here. This blog was written by Aida Isinika and Ntengua Mdoe Anita’s personal story

Tags: Irrigation, SRI

Share

Latest Blogs
Moving toward a sustainable green revolution in sub-Saharan Africa
January 29, 2025
Agrarian change in Northern Ghana: Winners, losers, and emerging tensions
January 22, 2025
Are commercialised farms driving agricultural transformation in rural Kenya?
January 14, 2025
Exploring gender dynamics in Malawi’s agricultural commercialisation
August 27, 2024
Changing land and labour relations on Ghana’s cocoa farms
May 20, 2024
Why is it so difficult to build or grow associations among smallholder farmers?
March 27, 2024
Climate resilience and agricultural commercialisation in Africa: Four lessons from APRA research
November 23, 2023
Unlocking the untapped potential of oil palm farming in south-western Ghana
November 13, 2023
Putting farmers first in pathways to equitable food systems: three open access books released
July 4, 2023
Why democracy hasn’t resolved policy failures in Ghana’s oil palm sector
June 29, 2023
In Memory of Dr Hannington Odame (1956-2023)
June 26, 2023
An agrarian revolution in the Fumbisi Valley: the modernisation of farming
June 15, 2023
Agricultural technology, food security and nutrition in Ghana
January 31, 2023
Why livestock can be good for the environment
January 16, 2023
How important is farm size to agricultural productivity in Sub-Saharan Africa?
December 1, 2022
Ethiopia’s import dependence on rice-exporting countries: implications for policy and development responses
November 24, 2022
Why COP27 needs a more sophisticated debate about livestock and climate change
November 14, 2022
Boosting commercialisation through the production of commercial tree crops in Nigeria
November 7, 2022
How does agricultural commercialisation affect livelihoods in Zimbabwe?
September 27, 2022
Tobacco and agrarian change in southern Africa
September 20, 2022

About Future Agricultures

The Future Agricultures Consortium is an Africa-based alliance of research organisations seeking to provide timely, high-quality and independent information and advice to improve agricultural policy and practice in Africa.

More info »

Contact

Future Agricultures Consortium Secretariat at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex Brighton BN1 9RE

info@future-agricultures.org

Follow us

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok