Abstract

AbstractTo date, little is known about how information flows within farmer groups and how extension interventions could be designed to deliver combined information on agriculture and nutrition. This study uses unique network data from 815 farm households in Kenya to investigate the structure and characteristics of agricultural and nutrition information networks within farmer groups. Dyadic regressions are used to analyze the factors influencing link formation for the exchange of agricultural and nutrition information. In addition, we apply fixed‐effects models to identify the characteristics of central persons driving information exchange in the two networks, as well as potentially isolated persons, who are excluded from information networks within their farmer groups. Our results show that nutrition information is exchanged within farmer groups, although to a limited extent, and mostly flows through the existing agricultural information links. Thus, diffusing nutrition information through agricultural extension systems may be a viable approach. Our findings further suggest that group leaders and persons living in central locations are important drivers in the diffusion of information in both networks and may thus serve as suitable entry points for nutrition‐sensitive extension programs. However, we also identify important heterogeneities in network characteristics. In particular, nutrition information is less often exchanged between men and women, and some group members are completely isolated from nutrition information exchange within their farmer groups. We derive recommendations on taking these differences in network structure and characteristics into account when designing nutrition‐sensitive extension programs.

Highlights

  • About 800 million people are undernourished and about two billion people suffer from micronutrient deficiencies (IFPRI 2017)

  • On community-based organizations (CBOs) level, we are interested in exploring the structure of agricultural and nutrition information networks

  • In order to achieve this at scale, nutrition information could be diffused to farm households organized in CBOs through the existing agricultural extension systems

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Summary

Introduction

About 800 million people are undernourished and about two billion people suffer from micronutrient deficiencies (IFPRI 2017). Most of these people live in rural areas of developing countries and depend on agriculture for food and income generation (IFPRI 2011; FAO 2015). Linking nutrition and agriculture is especially important since obesity, besides undernutrition and micronutrient deficiencies, is becoming prevalent in rural African communities, affecting both men and women (Popkin et al 2012; Gómez et al 2013). One way of making agriculture more nutritionsensitive, is to deliver nutrition information that targets farmers. A possible platform to channel nutrition information to farmers might be the existing agricultural extension systems

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