Type | Working Paper |
Title | Soil conservation decisions and non-farm economic conditions: A study of the rural labor market in the Philippine uplands of Bukidnon |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2001 |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ian_Coxhead/publication/265672226_Chapter_4_Soil_Conservation_Decisions_and_Non-Farm_Economic_Conditions_A_Study_of_the_Rural_Labor_Market_in_the_Philippine_Uplands_of_Bukidnon_1/links/54b531d70cf2318f0f972e91.pdf |
Abstract | Intensive agriculture in the fragile uplands is observed to cause environmental damage. In the long run, this might jeopardize the resource base and ultimately the capacity of upland households to maintain self-sufficiency in food supplies. There are, in general, two ways to influence farmers’ use of natural resources: direct interventions aimed at altering behavior, and indirect interventions, such as through prices, aimed at altering factors that influence farm decisions. In the Philippines, the most common mitigating measure for seemingly unsustainable upland agricultural practices is the direct approach, especially the introduction of soil-conserving methods through extension and farmer education. For example, the Philippine Department of Agriculture (DA) introduced Sloping Agricultural Land Technology (SALT), which is a package of soil management measures for sloping lands, in the early 1980s to combat soil erosion and land degradation in uplands. However, while there is some adoption of conservation measures such as hedgerows in high-intensity extension projects, there is little evidence of widespread farmer interest in SALT (Garrity et al. 1993). |
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