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Replication data for: Would strictly enforced forestry regulations affect farmers’ stated intentions to plant indigenous fruits trees? Insights from Cameroon

From theory it is expected that forestry laws and regulations affect the adoption of agroforestry technologies, such as planting of indigenous fruit trees. These trees are important sources of nutrients and income to thousands of farmers. However data on farmers’ perceptions and behaviour towards such policy instruments are scarce and contradictory. Based on data collected from 394 households in Cameroon, using a structured questionnaire, farmers’ awareness, perception and willingness to accept policy instruments governing on-farm trees were assessed. The study further investigated whether the policy instruments would affect their intentions to plant selected indigenous fruit trees on their farms. The analysis found that a majority of farmers are unaware of the laws governing access and trade in indigenous fruit tree species. Furthermore, even if strictly applied, a significant majority of farmers (60%) would not be discouraged by the regulations, from planting trees on their farms because it constitutes part of their traditional farming practices. Yet, the authors argue that planting of indigenous fruit tree species could increase under simplified rules, as 40% of the farmers do claim they would refus e to plant such trees if existing regulations are strictly enforced. The study therefore concludes that there is a need for new policies to attract more farmers to integrate indigenous fruit trees on their farms. Given the current trend to encourage on-farm tree planting to address food security and climate change issues, this is especially relevant.

Dataset's Files

Disclaimer.pdf
MD5: f876174a62c66ad334a0109b2a23c529

Disclaimer on data usage


Foundjemtita et al May 04_REG.tab
MD5: 96ac22aa271ad1c9b6abffbd62b19d76

Dataset used for study


Questionnaire used for survey. Key questions of relevance to this study can be referred from Section 4 onwards.


Terms of use
This dataset is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY-4.0). The license allows you, the user, to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and/or transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Creative Commons License.
Authors

Foundjem-Tita et. al.

Keywords

policy instruments, ntfp, farmers’ perception, tree planting, indigenous fruit trees, cameroon

Publisher

World Agroforestry (ICRAF)

Publication date

16 Dec 2014

DOI

https://doi.org/10.34725/DVN/28239

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