Abstract

The provision of information through mobile phone-enabled agricultural information services (m-Agri services) has the potential to revolutionise agriculture and significantly improve smallholder farmers’ livelihoods in Africa. Globally, the benefits of m-Agri services include facilitating farmers’ access to financial services and sourcing agricultural information about input use, practices, and market prices. There are very few published literature sources that focus on the potential benefits of m-Agri services in Africa and none of which explore their sustainability. This study, therefore, explores the evolution, provision, and sustainability of these m-Agri services in Africa. An overview of the current landscape of m-Agri services in Africa is provided and this illustrates how varied these services are in design, content, and quality. Key findings from the exploratory literature review reveal that services are highly likely to fail to achieve their intended purpose or be abandoned when implementers ignore the literacy, skills, culture, and demands of the target users. This study recommends that, to enhance the sustainability of m-Agri services, the implementers need to design the services with the users involved, carefully analyse, and understand the target environment, and design for scale and a long-term purpose. While privacy and security of users need to be ensured, the reuse or improvement of existing initiatives should be explored, and projects need to be data-driven and maintained as open source. Thus, the study concludes that policymakers can support the long-term benefit of m-Agri services by ensuring favourable policies for both users and implementers.

Highlights

  • An extraordinary digital revolution has helped to drive global development with technological progress, price reduction, and infrastructural deployment resulting in improved access and connectivity for much of the world’s populace [1]

  • This review explored the progress of m-Agri services in contributing to the improvement of livelihood of smallholder farmers and the challenges for their sustainability in Africa

  • This review identified that some of the m-Agri services in Africa encountered challenges such as a lack of trust about the content by the target users, the one-size-fit-all approach by the service initiators, and reduced attention for providing the necessary infrastructures before embarking on the development of the initiatives by the developers/implementers

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Summary

Introduction

An extraordinary digital revolution has helped to drive global development with technological progress, price reduction, and infrastructural deployment resulting in improved access and connectivity for much of the world’s populace [1]. The impact of this digital revolution is unevenly distributed, while many studies highlight the positive impacts and stress that these technological changes have the potential to enhance livelihoods in the global south. Digital technologies popularly known as information and communication technologies (ICTs) are comprised of various technologies that are used to aid information exchange and communication These technologies include hardware (e.g., computers and mobile phones) and software (e.g., Internet facilities and media for information transmission) [12,13]. The use of information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D) has continued to evolve [14,15,16,17] with increasing attention on their use for agricultural development in Africa [18,19,20,21,22,23]

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