Effects of Crop Farmers’-Pastoralists’ Conflicts on Agricultural Extension Practice and Services Delivery in South - East, Nigeria
Conflicts disrupt every economic activities of man including extension activities. This study investigates the effects of Crop farmer/pastoralist conflicts on agricultural extension practices and services delivery in South east, Nigeria. The specific objectives were to examine perceived extension practices and services in the area; identify causes of crop farmer/ pastoralists’ conflicts in the area and determine perceived effects of conflicts on agricultural extension services delivery in the study area. A total 452 workers was purposively selected for the study. Percentage, mean and standard deviation were used to analyze the data collected with the aid of questionnaire and interview (oral). The results showed that the extension workers educate rural farmers with a mean (M) response of 3.60, training farmers on new practices (M=3.68), organize demonstrations (M=3.43), keep record of visits (M=3.40), conduct needs assessments (M=3.30), organize extension campaigns(M=3.42) among others. The causes of conflicts include disagreement over access to land and use of water with 88.5% and 87.8% responses respectively, ownership/right to land (100%), right to use water (94.6%), migration (84.9%), lack of respect for traditional authority with 88.9%. Conflicts disrupts extension practices and services delivery by limiting the cooperative activities of farmers used by extension workers (M=2.87), prevents acquisition of training by extension workers (M=2.87), destroys knowledge transmission channels (M=2.87), makes programme monitoring difficult (M=2.91), delays completion of extension work (M=3.41), leads to abduction of extension workers (M=3.15) and disrupts extension work plan (M=3.19).
Introduction
Expansion schooling is a social science that recquires alluring changes complex human conduct. In rustic settings, augmentation administrations are answerable for engaging ranchers Hellin [1] for joint learning and aggregate activity Höckert & Ljung [2] for battling provincial neediness and food uncertainty through innovation move, supporting country grown-up picking up, helping ranchers in critical thinking and getting ranchers effectively associated with the rural information and data framework [3]. Through persistent expansion mediations and utilizations of different strategies and approaches in augmentation programs, the ideal change in human activities is conceivable. The comparative recorded perspectives were shared by van der Ban and Hawkins that the objectives of horticultural augmentation included moving data from the worldwide information base and from nearby examination to ranchers, empowering them to explain their own objectives and potential outcomes, instructing them on the best way to settle on better choices, and invigorating attractive agrarian turn of events.
Accordingly augmentation administrations give human resources upgrading inputs, including data streams that can improve provincial government assistance—a significant result since a long time ago perceived in the advancement exchange [4]. Further, the way of thinking of expansion work doesn’t restrict to instruct ranchers with respect to imaginative advances, yet additionally illuminating to perceive the interesting circumstance that thwarts the method of selection of various advances by the cultivating networks. In this manner, it is significant for expansion warning staff to get responsible for refereeing among ranchers [5]. Agrarian expansion plays a featuring job in farming and country advancement consequently is viewed as an approach apparatus for advancing the security and nature of horticultural items [6].
Rural augmentation administration conveyance has assumed a huge part in improving agrarian creation in Nigeria through arrangement of data on improved procedures of creation. Farming expansion assumes a vital part in guaranteeing the mindfulness and resulting appropriation of improved innovations utilizing different augmentation instructing strategies. This will improve efficiency and increase the living expectations of the ranchers who are the significant recipients [7]. Despite the fact that there stays a dominance of limited scope ranchers in Nigeria, the appropriation of improved procedures of cultivating keeps on affecting decidedly on farming. In the course of the most recent thirty years for example, interests in horticultural expansion exercises by governments and unfamiliar accomplices have yielded eminent profits for the ranchers and the country everywhere [8]. Disregarding all the positive effect recorded by agrarian expansion throughout the long term, everything isn’t well with horticultural creation and, for sure, augmentation administration conveyance in Nigeria. Indeed, cultivating and expansion keep on confronting overwhelming difficulties that require critical consideration.
A significant however fairly disregarded test of augmentation is the issue related with public contentions. Expanding dissatisfaction and impoverishment of ranchers occasioned by perpetual and broad homestead plot obliteration and the following unpleasant contentions are disintegrating the additions of augmentation endeavors. This is an issue for agrarian augmentation administration conveyance on the grounds that a definitive goal of rural expansion is the improvement of expectations for everyday comforts of cultivating families [5]. Mutual struggle alludes to clashes between non-state bunches that are coordinated along a common collective personality. Struggle alludes to the way that the gatherings need to oversee some contested and saw inseparable asset, like a land parcel or neighborhood political force. The gatherings included are non-state gatherings. This implies that neither one of the actors controls the state, albeit the state may be included as a significant supporting entertainer in a common struggle. The entertainers might be towns, ethnic gatherings, strict gatherings or self-protection civilian armies among others.
Clashes over admittance to land keep on propagating destitution among famers and block rural turn of events and food security in Nigeria [9]. Chikaire, et al. [10] uncovered that common contentions have intense impact on rural yield, costs of produce, promoting and dissemination of agrarian items, horticultural expansion exercises, rural credit openings, transportation costs, work supply and ranch pay of ranchers. Different elements have been recognized as answerable for shared struggles in the nation relying upon the financial and international conditions at that point. For the most part Alimba [11] distinguished financial, social, political, biological and pioneer factors as the fundamental reasons for public struggles in Nigeria.
Thinking about the impact of contention on individuals and their homestead, it turns out to be certain that once the ranchers are dislodged also, their territory deserted, the expansion activity endures an extraordinary arrangement as there is essentially nothing left for the augmentation specialist to chip away at. The expansions specialists are frequently at go across street between their work and steadfastness to the networks, towns, fellow and people who are in struggle where the specialists work. It isn’t clear what the impacts of common conflict emergencies are on the exercises of expansion specialist in Southeast States. Therefore; there is a hole in information. It is against this foundation that this examination will in general explore experimentally the circumstance in Southeast concerning the impact of shared clash on augmentation or extension specialist execution of their jobs. The broad objective of the study was to determine the effect of communal conflict on extension agents operations in Southeast. The specific objectives of the study includes to:
- Identify major causes of crop farmers/pastoralist conflicts in Southeast, Nigeria;
- Determine current extension advise/practices carried out by the extension staff in Southast; and
- Describe perceived effects of conflicts on extension services delivery.
Methodology
The study was carried out in Southeast Agro-ecological zone. The Southeast agro-ecological zone of Nigeria is comprised of five states namely, Imo, Anambra, Abia, Enugu and Ebonyi States. The zone has the National Root Crops Research Institute at Umudike, Umuahia, Abia State.as its agriculture headquarters. It is the home of the Igbo speaking people of Nigeria. It is located within latitudes 4° 47‟ 35‟‟N and 7° 7‟ 44‟‟N, and longitudes 7° 54‟ 26‟E and 8° 27‟ 10‟E in the tropical rain forest zone of Nigeria, with mean maximum temperature of 27oC, and total annual rainfall exceeding 2500mm [12]. The region is largely agrarian and there is thus much dependence on land resources, due to its dense population averaged to about 1000 people/Km2. This dependence on land has led to the over use of the land resources in the region, leading to the farming of agricultural lands annually.
The population of the study consists of all Extension Agents (EAs) of the 5 States ADPs. Due to the small number of the EAs in the 5 states, all were sample (Table 1). Data collected with questionnaire were analyzed using descriptive statistics. This includes the use of percentages presented in frequency distribution table to achieve objective 1. While the remaining objectives, 2 and 3 were achieved on a four point likert-type scale of strongly agree, agree, disagree and strongly disagree on a four point weighting scale of 4,3,2 and 1. The weighted index was added to give 10 divided by 4 to give 2.50. Any value less than 2.50 was not accepted while a value of 2.5 and above was taken as positive.
| Major causes | *Frequency | percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abia | Disagreement over access to Land | 400 | 88.5 |
| Anambra | Disagreement over the use of water | 397 | 87.8 |
| Ebonyi | Ownership /right to Land | 452 | 100 |
| Enugu | Right of use to land water | 428 | 94.6 |
| Imo | Severe droughts/climate |
Table 2: Number of EAs in the 5 States [13-15].
Results and Discussions
Major Causes of Crop Farmer/Pastoralist Conflicts in the Study Area
Table 2 shows the causes of crop farmer/pastoralist conflicts in the area. Among the causes are disagreement over access to land with 88.5% response, disagreement over the use of water (87.8%), ownership/right to land (100%), severe drought/climate change (95.1%), migration (84.9%) and lack of respect for traditional authority (88.9%). This is in line with above research findings of Braukämper [16] ranchers and pastoralist in numerous regions and various nations make their vocation inside the equivalent geological, political, and socio-social conditions which might be described by asset shortage or political disparity [17]. Rancher pastoralist clashes have been related with the contention of land asset utilize exacerbated by diminishing assets [18]. A few specialists have connected this emergency to the hypothesis of eco-brutality [19], where natural elements and abuse of scant assets prompts struggle and savagery. This may clarify the lessening touching assets (land, field and so on) and helpless administration of existing eating saves [20] as blamable.
Also, the populace is dynamic and truly expanding contrasted with land that is moderately static. The populace development pace of Nigeria each year is 3.2% [21]. Along these lines, an ever increasing number of individuals will keep on contending over land. Different specialists [22, 23, 24] relate the reasons for struggle to the worldwide environmental change and the fighting desertification and aridity that has diminished arable and touching grounds, constraining pastoralist to move southwards looking for field for their animals. Environment change induced precipitation moving examples/sum and desertification lessens crop terrains, and ranchers need to follow these examples, prompting cover on brushing lands. The Fulbe herders in Nigeria, for instance are confronted with quickly evaporating grass, driving them to change from the Bunaji steers breed, which relies upon grass, to the Sokoto Gudali, which promptly peruses [25].
| Major causes | *Frequency | percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abia | Disagreement over access to Land | 400 | 88.5 |
| Anambra | Disagreement over the use of water | 397 | 87.8 |
| Ebonyi | Ownership /right to Land | 452 | 100 |
| Enugu | Right of use to land water | 428 | 94.6 |
| Imo | Severe droughts/climate change | 430 | 95.1 |
| Migration | 384 | 84.9 | |
| Lack of respect for traditional authority | 402 | 88.9 |
Table 1: Major causes of crop farmer -Pastoralist Conflicts. *multiple responses
Current Extension Practices/Services Rendered
Extension staff renders an avalanche of services numerous to mention. Table 3 revealed these services based on a mean (M) response of 2.50 and above. They include education of rural farmers (M=3.60), training farmers on new practices (M=3.68). help farmers identify their production problems (M=3.73), expose farmers to opportunities for farm improvement (M=3.69), linking farmers to credit points (M=3.44), conducting needs assessments (M=3.30), promotes needs and problems (M=3.32), conduct community forums (M=3.41), organize farmer field schools (M=3.23), conduct interviews/surveys (M=3.33), conduct focus group discussions (M=3.61), write extension evaluation report(M =3.18) organize extension campaigns (M=3.42) keeping records of farm visits (M=3.40), linking farmers to input agencies (M=3.25), dissemination of timely information to farmers (M=3.18) among many others.
Rural extension administrations, likewise called augmentation, are for the most part the various exercises that give the data and administrations required and requested by ranchers and different entertainers in rustic settings to help them in building up their own specialized, hierarchical, and the board abilities and practices to improve their jobs and prosperity” [26]. Augmentation laborers have some normal jobs: teaching ranchers and makers so the ranchers/ makers can help themselves; connecting ranchers/makers with research-based data to improve farming creation, profitability, handling and advertising of horticultural labor and products. Horticultural augmentation (otherwise called farming warning administrations) assumes an essential part in boosting agrarian profitability, expanding food security, improving rustic livelihoods, and advancing agribusiness as a motor of favorable to poor monetary development.
| Mean | SD | |
|---|---|---|
| Education of rural farmers | 3.6 | 0.67 |
| Training farmers on new practices | 3.68 | 0.62 |
| Organizing demonstration | 3.43 | 0.77 |
| Linking farmers to input agencies | 3.25 | 0.84 |
| Keeping records of farm visit | 3.4 | 0.74 |
| Dissemination of timely information to farmers | 3.18 | 1.06 |
| Creating awareness on possible new technique | 3.39 | 0.74 |
| Teach farmers to improve the quality of living | 3.28 | 0.65 |
| Formation/organization of farmer groups | 3.43 | 0.72 |
| Help farmers identify their production problem | 3.73 | 0.79 |
| Expose farmers to opportunities for farm improvement 2.69 | 2.69 | 1.07 |
| Linking farmers to credit points | 3.44 | 0.75 |
| Facilitating feedback from farmers | 2.7 | 1.04 |
| Conduct needs assessments | 3.3 | 1.07 |
| Conduct community forums | 3.41 | 0.74 |
| Prioritize needs & problems | 3.32 | 0.9 |
| Organize farmer field schools | 3.23 | 0.67 |
| Organize field days with farmers | 2.91 | 0.24 |
| Write field reports | 2.61 | 0.89 |
| Conduct Interviews/surveys | 3.33 | 0.72 |
| Conduct focus group discussions | 3.61 | 0.72 |
| Write extension evaluation reports | 3.7 | 0.06 |
| Share results and impact | 3.29 | 0.78 |
| Make effective presentations of results | 3.18 | 1.08 |
| Organize extension champions | 3.42 | 0.74 |
Table 3: Extension Practice/Services Rendered. Mean 2.50 accepted
Effects of Crop farmers/Pastoralists’ Conflicts on Agricultural Extension Practices/Delivery
No meaningful economic activities can occur in a situation of chaos and unrest. The same is true of extension practices and services delivery in the event of communal conflicts involving crop farmers, pastoralists and other stake holders. Table 4 showed that conflicts limits the cooperative activities of (M=2.68), prevents adoption of improved technologies (M=3.25), stops continued use of adopted technologies (M=3.05), withdrawal of extension services/ methods (M=3.74), makes programme planning difficult (M=2.91), delays/prevents programme evaluation (M=3.60), disrupts agents work plan (M=3.19), hinders project execution/implementation (M=2.92), brings dissatisfactions among staff (M=3.01), delays completion of extension work (M=3.41), reduces/limits turnover of extension work (M=2.87), abduction/kidnapping of extension personnel (M=3.15), and possible death of extension personnel (M=2.83).
This result corroborates the findings of Bolarinwa & Oyeyinka [27], Kimenyi, et al. [28], Adelakun, et al. [29] who found that availability of extension services like number of visits per extension agent, number of contact with farmers, training of contact farmers and demonstrations on small plots (Management Training Plots) to teach the farmer new techniques and practices which enable them to compare the results of the old and new practices as well as adoption of improved technologies by both crop and livestock farmers and continued use of adopted technologies were greatly affected during conflict situation.
Robertson & Steve [30] detailed that unending asset based struggles have unfavorably influenced the powerful conveyance of augmentation administrations likewise specialists, which thusly decreased ranchers’ degree of use of advances around there. The creators further expressed that expansion specialists are upset by clashes of different sizes which make it hard to complete augmentation administrations like the quantity of visits per expansion specialist, number of contact with rancher gatherings, preparing of contact ranchers and exhibitions on little plots or the executives preparing plots (MTPs) to show the rancher new strategies and practices which empower them to analyze the consequences of the old and new practices were extraordinarily influenced during struggle circumstance. In a comparative turn of events, Adelakun, et al. [29] demonstrated that the impact of contention on accessibility of expansion administrations, appropriation of improved advancements by both yield and animals ranchers and proceeded with utilization of embraced advances was serious. Kimenyi, et al. [28] expressed that agrarian expansion organizations and foundations like the Agricultural Development Programs (ADPs) and examination establishments that help the horticultural area are additionally influenced during the contention circumstances. Clashes may have constrained a large portion of these organizations (government offices, ADPs and exploration establishments) to decrease their exercises like field preliminaries and observing among others to insignificant capacities, migrate to zones where assaults are negligible or dropped a few exercises.
| Mean | SD | |
|---|---|---|
| Limits the cooperation activities | 2.68 | 1.53 |
| Limits availability of extension worker resource | 2.74 | 0.64 |
| Prevents acquisition of training by extension | 2.87 | 1.09 |
| Prevents the motivation needed by extension | 2.94 | 0.73 |
| Destroys knowledge transmission channels | 2.84 | 1.14 |
| Stops continual use of adopted technologies | 3.05 | 1.2 |
| Prevents adoption of improved technologies | 3.2 | 0.67 |
| Withdrawal of extension services/methods | 3.74 | 0.96 |
| Makes programme monitoring difficult | 2.91 | 0.81 |
| Delays/prevent programme evaluation | 3.6 | 0.71 |
| Disrupts agents work plan | 3.19 | 0.67 |
| Extension worker/staff may abandon work | 3.18 | 1.01 |
| Hinder project execution implementation | 2.92 | 1.03 |
| Brings dissatisfaction among staff | 3.01 | 0.84 |
| Delays completion of extension work | 3.41 | 0.77 |
| Reduces/limit turnover of extension work | 2.84 | 0.8 |
| Abduction of extension personnel | 3.15 | 1.04 |
| Possible Death of extension personnel | 2.83 | 1.02 |
Table 4: Effects on Agricultural Extension Practices/Delivery. Mean 2.50 accepted
Conclusion
Extension remains the only way through which agriculture could be beneficial to the rural poor. Its education and teaching nature helps improve the farmers. Conflicts hinder the smooth operation of extension personnel who transfers the knowledge. The agents are hindered by conflicts of various magnitudes which make it difficult to carry out extension services. Ending these conflicts will mean ensuring food security. The study revealed that Extension Agents perceived communal conflicts to have high effects on their job performance as it prevents them from going about and carrying out their normal duty. Government should adopt policies that would tackle the causes and occurrence of communal conflicts in communities in the country so as to reduce the effect of the conflicts on timeliness, effectiveness, efficiency, targeting and usefulness of extension services.
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