The
contributions of Agricultural Development Programmes (ADPs) to rural
livelihood and food security in Nigeria were extensively reviewed. The
genesis and historical development of the ADP system were presented. It
was noted that the Agricultural Development Project (ADP) via the
Training and Visit (T and V) system started with the growth from the
first three enclave projects at Funtua, Gusau and Gombe which were
started in 1975/76 as enclave ADPs. Other generation of ADPs were
identified as the Accelerated Development Area Programme (ADAP), phased
ADPs and state-wide ADPs respectively. The critical mandate/objective of
the ADPs is to boost agricultural production as well as contribute to
rural livelihood and food security. In order to achieve this goal, the
programme implementation strategies of the ADPs were identified to
include a re-organised and revitalized agricultural extension system, an
effective farm input distribution system, on autonomous ADP management
unit, a rigorous monitoring system and a joint state/federal
responsibility. In addition, the components of the ADPs which constitute
the vehicle for achievement of her objectives are crop production,
on-farm adaptive research, farm input distribution, farmer training,
media support, infrastructural development, rural agro-industrial
scheme, staff development and programme funding. The ADP system was
noted to have made remarkable success in the agricultural and rural
landscape in Nigeria. The achievements and impact of the ADPs were
identified to be in the area of revitalized extension service, local
capacity building, rural infrastructural development, input
distribution, technology development, transfer and adoption, as well as
improved rural livelihood and food security. Significant ADP
achievements in the above focus areas have guaranteed programme
continuity for the past two decades in Nigeria. These achievements
notwithstanding, higher performance were constrained by undue political
interference by some state governments, cash flow instability due to
irregular payment of counterpart funding by some state governments,
rapid staff turn-over in most ADPs and adverse effects of some
macro-economic policies of government, among others. In order for the
ADP system to make greater impact, it is recommended that there should
be increased political support by the governments, increased
community/beneficiary participation, commercialization of more ADP
activities and more private sector involvement and intensification of
extension-research linkage.
Source: http://www.medwelljournals.com/abstract/?doi=aj.2007.503.510
No comments:
Post a Comment