Abstract
Amidst growing concerns about the threats posed by climate change for
rural livelihoods, policy makers have given increasing attention to the
need for more climate secure agriculture. This paper explores the
challenges and opportunities of encouraging the cultivation of millets, a
class of coarse grain cereals that are both water efficient and drought
resistant, which are prominently grown in rainfed regions of the
developing world. Based on a qualitative study in the Ananthapur
District of Andhra Pradesh, India, we explore how millets factor into
households’ production strategies and their role as a risk response
strategy. Millets, we found, play an important role in mitigating
households’ exposure to climate risk, both by diversifying production
portfolios and as a contingency crop to confront delayed rains at
planting time. Nonetheless, there remain important limitations for the
viability of millets due to their low income generating capacity. To
have a more significant impact on welfare and sustainability, policy
needs to address the structural conditions of vulnerability that limit
the viability of more secure livelihoods. We explore some of the ways
that state intervention can make millets more viable by enhancing their
terms of marketability and by providing other kinds of support.
Published in
World Development Perspectives
2016, volume: 2, pages: 5 - 10
SLU Authors
- Revitalizing Rainfed Agriculture Network (RRAN)
UKÄ Subject classification
Public Administration Studies
Human Geography
Agricultural Science
Publication identifier
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wdp.2016.06.005
Permanent link to this page (URI)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/90363