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In Uganda, farmers in arid and semi-arid areas lack sweetpotato seed after dry spells. This constrains the crop's potential to contribute to food security. Triple S (sand, storage, sprouting) is a root-based technology addressing seed scarcity. Despite the technology's efficacy, a systematic assessment of its demand has not been done. A study was undertaken to assess how Knowledge, Attitudes, Norms and Perceptions influence farmers uptake of the Triple S, using a structured questionnaire with 255 farmers stratified into users (n = 132) and non-users (n = 123). Sex-disaggregated focus groups were conducted with 40 farmers. The Theory of Planned Behavior and Technology Adoption Model were used to test hypotheses on Triple S adoption. Perceived Behavior Control, Perceived Usefulness and Knowledge positively predicted Behavior Intention (BI) only for non-users, while Attitude, Subjective Norms and Agency predicted BI for users. Gender Norms negatively influenced Agency for both groups. Gender-responsive adoption strategies may enhance technology uptake.
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Sarah Mayanja
International Potato Center
Janet Mwende Mutiso
University of East Anglia
Norman Kwikiriza
International Potato Center
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability
University of East Anglia
International Potato Center
International Potato Center
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Mayanja et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6ee1fb6db6435876693d8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2024.2329389