Perceptions of villagers on traditional food crops production in response to climate change in Bocha village, Manicaland provinc

Authors

  • TINASHE MWAROZVA Faculty of Science, Technology, Agriculture & Food Systems Development, Zimbabwe Ezekiel Guti University, Bindura, Zimbabwe; Department of Horticulture, Agriculture Management, Zimbabwe Open University, Harare, Zimbabwe Author

Keywords:

poverty, indigenous knowledge systems, food security, Drought, Mitigation, Adaptation

Abstract

Based on the qualitative approach, this research highlights an assessment of the perceptions of villagers on traditional food crop production in response to climate change. The study was inspired by the need to unearth views on traditional food crop production, how they are produced in the wake of climate change and the mitigation measures they employ to ensure food security and poverty reduction. The study was undertaken in Bocha Village in the Manicaland Province of Zimbabwe. The Indigenous Knowledge (IK) theoretical framework used hypothesised ways of knowing, seeing and thinking, passed down orally from generation to generation and that reflect thousands of years of experimentation and innovation in all aspects of life. A sample of 10 was drawn using purposive sampling. Data was gathered using semistructured interviews and focus group discussions with participants. Findings were thematically presented. The study revealed that villagers view traditional food crops as food security commodities with droughttolerant and climate mitigation potential produced using indigenous knowledge systems. They also reduce poverty through commercial and nutritional benefits derived from their processing

Author Biography

  • TINASHE MWAROZVA, Faculty of Science, Technology, Agriculture & Food Systems Development, Zimbabwe Ezekiel Guti University, Bindura, Zimbabwe; Department of Horticulture, Agriculture Management, Zimbabwe Open University, Harare, Zimbabwe

    Tinashe Magada Mwarozva is a horticultural crop scientist with extensive experience in field and controlled environment horticulture, soil fertility management and water conservation and soil science. He is also a development practitioner specialising in environment and sustainable development, project planning and management, climate change adaptation, mitigation and resilience building. He has a demonstrated history of designing, coordinating and managing farmer climate-smart tailored agronomic solutions for sustainable crop production intensification and resource use efficiency. His goals are designing and promoting sustainable agriculture and poverty alleviation systems with special emphasis on resource use efficiency, resilience building through agroecology, climate-smart agriculture using WEF nexus approaches. 

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Published

2024-10-03

How to Cite

Perceptions of villagers on traditional food crops production in response to climate change in Bocha village, Manicaland provinc. (2024). The Review of Rural Resilience Praxis, 1(1 & 2). http://journals.zegu.ac.zw/index.php/rrp/article/view/142

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