Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Assessing the role of farmer field schools in promoting pro-adaptive behaviour towards climate change among Jamaican farmers

  • Published:
Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

With the vulnerability of Jamaica’s agricultural sector to climate change being well established, there is a compelling need to incorporate useful adaptation strategies. One such pro-adaptation strategy is the farmer field school (FFS) which is currently being used to promote climate-smart agricultural practices among Jamaican farmers through a number of social learning and capacity building initiatives. A hallmark of the field school methodology is its promotion of adaptation by empowering farmers to plan for and cope with the effects of climate change by improving knowledge, awareness and adoption of best practices, while providing a viable income stream to participants. Though the FFS program has been touted as a huge success, with several community groups sustaining their income diversification and adaptation efforts even after the formal project has ended, the extent of participation in these field schools has however been uneven and limited in numbers. Amidst claims of the program’s achievements to date, and plans to replicate and upscale the field school methodology in Jamaica as a climate adaptation strategy, a comparative assessment of the role participation plays in shaping local farmers’ cognitive and behavioural responses towards climate change is very timely. The case study reported in this paper is informed by a comparative mixed methods approach, undertaken in three communities in northern Clarendon, Jamaica. The study assesses the particular ways that participation in the farmer field school program has influenced the knowledge, attitudes and perceptions of FFS trainees about climate change compared to their non-FFS counterparts. Preliminary results indicate that FFS participants perceive themselves as having a higher adaptive capacity in comparison to non-field school participants, amidst both groups having access to similar stocks of assets. Ultimately, our results highlight that cognitive factors (e.g. perceptions of adaptive capacity) and involvement in social networks may be as important as the more commonly researched asset-based indicators in shaping individual adaptive behaviour.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1
Fig. 2

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Adger, WN, Huq S, Brown K, Conway D, Hulme M (2003) Adaptation to climate change in the developing world. Progress in development studies 3(3):179–195. Sage Publications Sage CA: Thousand Oaks, CA

  • Adger WN, Lorenzoni I, O’Brien K (2009) Adapting to climate change thresholds, values, governance. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • Adger WN, Brown K, Nelson DR, Berkes F, Eakin H, Folke C, Galvin K, Gunderson L, Goulden M, O’Brien K (2011) Resilience implications of policy responses to climate change. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Clim Chang 2(5):757–766

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Agrawal A (2010) Local institutions and adaptation to climate change. Social Dimensions of Climate Change: Equity and Vulnerability in a Warming World 2:173–78

  • Agrawal A, Perrin N, Chhatre A, Benson C. Kononen M (2009) Climate policy processes, local institutions, and adaptation actions: mechanisms of translation and influence. The World Bank, Washington DC

  • Agrawal A, Perrin N (2009) Climate adaptation, local institutions and rural livelihoods. Adapting to Climate Change: Thresholds, Values, Governance, p 350–67

  • Allen MR, Barros VR, Broome J, Cramer W, Christ R, Church JA, Clarke L, Dahe Q, Dasgupta P, Dubash NK (2014) IPCC Fifth Assessment Synthesis Report-Climate Change 2014 Synthesis Report

  • Arbuckle JG, Morton Jr. LW, and Hobbs J (2015) Understanding farmer perspectives on climate change adaptation and mitigation: the roles of trust in sources of climate information, climate change beliefs, and perceived risk. Environ Behav 47(2):205–234

  • Ayers J, Forsyth T (2009) Community-based adaptation to climate change. Environ: Sci Policy Sustain Dev 51(4):22–31

    Google Scholar 

  • Banuri T, Weyant JP, Akumu G, Najam A, Pingueli Rosa L, Rayner S, Sachs W, Sharma R, Yohe G (2001) Setting the stage: climate change and sustainable development. Climate change 2001: mitigation: report of Working Group III, (IPCC): Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p 74–114

  • Baptiste AK, Kinlocke R (2016) We are not all the same!: comparative climate change vulnerabilities among fishers in Old Harbour Bay, Jamaica. Geoforum 73:47–59

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Barros VR, Field CB, Dokke D.-J, Mastrandrea MD, Mach KJ, Bilir TE, Chatterjee M, Ebi KL, Estrada YO, Genova RC (2015) Climate change 2014: impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability. Part B: regional aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

  • Beckford CL, Rhiney K (2016) Future of food and agriculture in the Caribbean in the context of climate change and globalization: where do we go from here? In: Beckford C, Rhiney K (eds) Globalization, agriculture and food in the Caribbean: climate change, gender and geography. Palgrave-Macmillan, London, pp 267–295

    Google Scholar 

  • Begum K (2012) Challenges of mainstreaming climate change adaptation in Bangladesh. University of Tasmania, Hobart

    Google Scholar 

  • Bradshaw B, Dolan H, Smit B (2004) Farm-level adaptation to climatic variability and change: crop diversification in the Canadian Prairies. Clim Chang 67(1):119–141 Springer

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bryant CR, Smit B, Brklacich M, Johnston TR, Smithers J, Chjotti Q, Singh B (2000) Adaptation in Canadian agriculture to climatic variability and change. Clim Chang 45(1):181–201

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Campbell D, Beckford C (2009) Negotiating uncertainty: Jamaican small farmers’ adaptation and coping strategies, before and after hurricanes—a case study of hurricane dean. Sustainability 1(4):1366–1387

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Campbell D, Barker D, McGregor D (2011) Dealing with drought: small farmers and environmental hazards in southern St. Elizabeth, Jamaica. Appl Geogr 31(1):146–158

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Charatsari C, Koutsouris A, Lioutas E, Kalivas A, Tsaliki E (2015) Social and psychological dimensions of participation in farmer field schools: lessons from rural Greece. In International Conference Meanings of the Rural—Between Social Representations, Consumptions and Rural Development Strategies; 28–29 September 2015, University of Aveiro, Portugal

  • Charatsari C, Lioutas ED, Koutsouris A (2017) Farmers’ motivational orientation toward participation in competence development projects: a self-determination theory perspective. J Agric Educ Ext 23(2):105–120

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dalton TJ, Yahaya I, Naab J (2014) Perceptions and performance of conservation agriculture practices in Northwestern Ghana. Agric Ecosyst Environ 187:65–71

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Defiesta GD, Rapera CL (2014) Measuring adaptive capacity of farmers to climate change and variability: application of a composite index to an agricultural community in the Philippines. J Environ Sci Manag 17(2):48–62

  • Deressa TT, Hassan RM, Ringler C (2011) Perception of and adaptation to climate change by farmers in the Nile basin of Ethiopia. J Agric Sci 149:23–31

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dodman D, Mitlin D (2013) Challenges for community-based adaptation: discovering the potential for transformation. J Int Dev 25(5):640–659

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Esham M, Garforth C (2013) Agricultural adaptation to climate change: insights from a farming community in Sri Lanka. Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 18(5):535–549

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Feder G, Murgai R, Quizon JB (2004) Sending farmers back to school: the impact of farmer field schools in Indonesia. Appl Econ Perspect Policy 26(1):45–62

    Google Scholar 

  • Folke C, Carpenter S, Elmqvist T, Gunderson L, Holling CS, Walker B (2002) Resilience and sustainable development: building adaptive capacity in a world of transformations. AMBIO J Hum Environ 31(5):437–40

  • Ford J, Ford LB (2011) Climate change adaptation in developed nations: from theory to practice. Vol 42. Springer Science & Business Media

  • Forsyth T (2013) Community-based adaptation: a review of past and future challenges. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Clim Chang 4(5):439–446

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Füssel H-M (2007) Adaptation planning for climate change: concepts, assessment approaches, and key lessons. Sustain Sci 2(2):265–275

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gamble DW, Parnell DB, Curtis S (2009) Caribbean vulnerability: development of an appropriate climatic framework. Global Change and Caribbean Vulnerability: Environment, Economy and Society at Risk, p 22–46

  • Gamble DW, Campbell D, Allen TL, Barker D, Curtis S, McGregor D, Popke J (2010) Climate change, drought, and Jamaican agriculture: local knowledge and the climate record. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 100(4):880–893 Taylor & Francis

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Godtland EM, Sadoulet E, de Janvry A, Murgai R, Ortiz O (2004) The impact of farmer field schools on knowledge and productivity: a study of potato farmers in the Peruvian Andes. Econ Dev Cult Chang 53(1):63–92 The University of Chicago Press

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Grothmann T, Patt A (2005) Adaptive capacity and human cognition: the process of individual adaptation to climate change. Glob Environ Chang 15(3):199–213 Elsevier

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hamilton LC, Keim BD (2009) Regional variation in perceptions about climate change. Int J Climatol 29(15):2348–2352

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Heath Y, Gifford R (2006) Free-market ideology and environmental degradation the case of belief in global climate change. Environ Behav 38(1):48–71

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hope ALB, Jones CR (2014) The impact of religious faith on attitudes to environmental issues and carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies: a mixed methods study. Technol Soc 38:48–59

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Howden SM, Soussana J-F, Tubiello FN, Chhetri N, Dunlop M, Meinke H (2007) Adapting agriculture to climate change. Proc Natl Acad Sci 104(50):19691–19696

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Ingram M, Ingram H, Lejano R (2014) What’s the story? Creating and sustaining environmental networks. Environ Polit 23(6):984–1002 Routledge

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Jantarasami LC, Lawler JJ, Thomas CW (2010) Institutional barriers to climate change adaptation in US National Parks and forests. Ecol Soc 15(4):33

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Juana JS, Kahaka Z, Okurut FN (2013) Farmers’ perceptions and adaptations to climate change in sub-Sahara Africa: a synthesis of empirical studies and implications for public policy in African agriculture. J Agric Sci 5(4):121

    Google Scholar 

  • Kragt MF, Mugera A, Kolikow S (2013) An interdisciplinary framework of limits and barriers to agricultural climate change adaptation. In: 20th International Congress on Modelling and Simulation, Adelaide

  • Lata S, Nunn P (2012) Misperceptions of climate-change risk as barriers to climate-change adaptation: a case study from the Rewa Delta, Fiji. Clim Chang 110(1–2):169

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Lemos MC, Kirchhoff CJ, Ramprasad V (2012) Narrowing the climate information usability gap. Nat Clim Chang 2(11):789–794

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Luseno WK, McPeak JG, Barrett CB, Little PD, Gebru G (2003) Assessing the value of climate forecast information for pastoralists: evidence from Southern Ethiopia and Northern Kenya. World Dev 31(9):1477–1494

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Maddison DJ (2007) The perception of and adaptation to climate change in Africa. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, no. 4308

  • Malka A, Krosnick JA, Langer G (2009) The association of knowledge with concern about global warming: trusted information sources shape public thinking. Risk Anal 29(5):633–647

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McGray H, Hammill A, Rob B, Schipper EL, Parry J-E (2007) Weathering the storm: options for framing adaptation and development. World Resources Institute, Washington, DC, p 57

    Google Scholar 

  • McGregor DFM, Barker D, Campbell D (2009) Environmental change and Caribbean food security: recent hazard impacts and domestic food production in Jamaica. Global Change and Caribbean Vulnerability: Environment, Economy and Society at Risk, p 273–97

  • Measham TG, Preston BL, Smith TF, Brooke C, Gorddard R, Withycombe G, Morrison C (2011) Adapting to climate change through local municipal planning: barriers and challenges. Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 16(8):889–909

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Meze-Hausken E (2004) Contrasting climate variability and meteorological drought with perceived drought and climate change in northern Ethiopia. Clim Res 27(1):19–31

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moser SC (2010) Communicating climate change: history, challenges, process and future directions. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Clim Chang 1(1):31–53

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moser SC, Ekstrom JA (2010) A framework to diagnose barriers to climate change adaptation. Proc Natl Acad Sci 107(51):22026–22031. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1007887107

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Moser SC (2014) Communicating adaptation to climate change: the art and science of public engagement when climate change comes home. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Clim Chang 5(3):337–358

  • Mugi-Ngenga EW, Mucheru-Muna MW, Mugwe JN, Ngetich FK, Mairura FS, Mugendi DN (2016) Household’s socio-economic factors influencing the level of adaptation to climate variability in the dry zones of Eastern Kenya. J Rural Stud 43(Supplement C):49–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2015.11.004

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Murray V, Ebi KL (2012) IPCC special report on managing the risks of extreme events and disasters to advance climate change adaptation (SREX). J Epidemiol Community Health 66(9):759–760

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Nederlof SE, Odonkor EN (2006) Lessons from an experiential learning process: the case of cowpea farmer field schools in Ghana. J Agric Educ Ext 12(4):249–271

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Nelson R, Kokic P, Crimp S, Martin P, Holger M, Howden SM, de Voil P, Nidumolu U (2010) The vulnerability of Australian rural communities to climate variability and change: part II—integrating impacts with adaptive capacity. Environ Sci Pol 13(1):18–27

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Nerlich B, Koteyko N, Brown B (2010) Theory and language of climate change communication. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Clim Chang 1(1):97–110

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Nigg JM, Mileti D (2002) Natural hazards and disasters (handbook of environmental sociology). Greenwood Press, Westport

    Google Scholar 

  • Nisbet MC (2010) Knowledge into action. Doing News Framing Analysis: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives, p 43

  • Nisengwe JFR (2016) Risk perceptions, attitudes, and climate change adaptation behaviors: a case of farmers in Nyabihu District. Michigan State University, Rwanda

    Google Scholar 

  • Ortiz O, Garrett KA, Health JJ, Orrego R, Nelson RJ (2004) Management of potato late blight in the Peruvian highlands: evaluating the benefits of farmer field schools and farmer participatory research. Plant Dis 88(5):565–571

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pallant J (2007) SPSS manual: a step by step guide to data analysis using SPSS for windows, 3rd edn. Open University Press, Maidenhead

    Google Scholar 

  • Pasquini L, Ziervogel G, Cowling RM, Shearing C (2015) What enables local governments to mainstream climate change adaptation? Lessons learned from two municipal case studies in the western cape, South Africa. Climate and Development 7(1):60–70

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pelling M, Zaidi Z (2013) Measuring adaptive capacity: application of an indexing methodology in Guyana. Environment, Politics and Development Working Paper Series, Department of Geography, King’s College London

  • Pelling M, High C, Dearing J, Smith D (2008) Shadow spaces for social learning: a relational understanding of adaptive capacity to climate change within organisations. Environ Plann A 40(4):867–884 SAGE Publications Sage UK: London, England

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Piya L, Maharjan KL Joshi NP (2013) Determinants of adaptation practices to climate change by Chepang households in the rural Mid-Hills of Nepal. Reg Environ Chang 13(2013):437–447. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-012-0359-5

  • Pretty J, Buck L (2002) Social capital and social learning in the process of natural resource management. Natural resources management in African agriculture: understanding and improving current practices. CAB International, Wallingford, pp 23–34. https://doi.org/10.1079/9780851995847.0023

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • Rawlani AK, Sovacool BK (2011) Building responsiveness to climate change through community based adaptation in Bangladesh. Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 16(8):845–863

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Reid H, Huq S (2007) Community-based adaptation: a vital approach to the threat climate change poses to the poor. International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). Briefing Paper: IIED, London

  • Rhiney K (2015) Geographies of Caribbean vulnerability in a changing climate: issues and trends. Geogr Compass 9(3):97–114

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Rhiney K, Campbell D, Barker D (2016) Geographies of vulnerability and resilience of rural farming communities in Jamaica to climate variability and change: a comparative analysis. In: Barker D, McGregor D, Rhiney K, Edwards T (eds) Global change and the Caribbean: adaptation and resilience. The University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, pp 89–114

    Google Scholar 

  • Roco L, Engler A, Bravo-Ureta BE, Jara-Rojas R (2015) Farmers’ perception of climate change in Mediterranean Chile. Reg Environ Chang 15(5):867–879

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Röling N, Van De Fliert E (1994) Transforming extension for sustainable agriculture: the case of integrated pest ,anagement in rice in Indonesia. Agric Hum Values 11(2–3):96–108

  • Sharma S (1996) Applied multivariate techniques. John Willey & Sons, Inc., New York OpenURL

    Google Scholar 

  • Silvestri S, Bryan E, Ringler C, Herrero M, Okoba B (2012) Climate change perception and adaptation of agro-pastoral communities in Kenya. Reg Environ Chang 12:791–802

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Smit B, Wandel J (2006) Adaptation, adaptive capacity and vulnerability. Glob Environ Chang 16(3):282–292

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Sundblad E-L, Biel A, Gärling T (2007) Cognitive and affective risk judgements related to climate change. J Environ Psychol 27(2):97–106

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Suzanne Nederlof E, Odonkor EN (2006) Lessons from an experiential learning process: the case of cowpea farmer field schools in Ghana. J Agric Educ Ext 12(4):249–271

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Swanson D, Hiley J, Venema HD (2000) Indicators of adaptive capacity to climate change for agriculture in the prairie region of Canada: an analysis based on statistics Canada’s Census of Agriculture. International Institute for Sustainable Development

  • Tambo JA, Abdoulaye T (2012) Climate change and agricultural technology adoption: the case of drought tolerant maize in rural Nigeria. Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 17(3):277–292

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Taylor MA, Stephenson TS, Anthony Chen A, Stephenson KA (2012) Climate change and the Caribbean: review and response. Caribb Stud 40(2):169–200 Institute of Caribbean Studies

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Tribbia J, Moser SC (2008) More than information: what coastal managers need to plan for climate change. Environ Sci Pol 11(4):315–328

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Vedwan N (2006) Culture, climate and the environment: local knowledge and perception of climate change among apple growers in Northwestern India. J Ecol Anthropol 10(1):4

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Vedwan N, Rhoades RE (2001) Climate change in the Western Himalayas of India: a study of local perception and response. Clim Res 19(2):109–117

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Waddington H, White H, J Anderson (2014) Farmer field schools: from agricultural extension to adult education. Systematic Review Summary 1

  • Wang J, Brown DG, Agrawal A (2013) Climate adaptation, local institutions, and rural livelihoods: a comparative study of herder communities in Mongolia and Inner Mongolia, China. Glob Environ Chang 23(6):1673–1683 Elsevier

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Yang P, Liu W, Shan X, Li P, Zhou J, Lu J, Li Y (2008) Effects of training on acquisition of pest management knowledge and skills by small vegetable farmers. Crop Prot 27(12):1504–1510

    Article  Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Kevon Rhiney.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Tomlinson, J., Rhiney, K. Assessing the role of farmer field schools in promoting pro-adaptive behaviour towards climate change among Jamaican farmers. J Environ Stud Sci 8, 86–98 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13412-017-0461-6

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13412-017-0461-6

Keywords

Navigation