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      Survey-based data on food security, nutrition and agricultural production shocks among rural farming households in northern Uganda

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          Abstract

          Climate change, degradation of natural resources, conflict or civil war, diseases and poverty are among the key threats that impact agriculture, human nutrition, food security and food safety among rural households in developing countries. Sustainability of food systems and livelihoods will thus crucially depend on not only the ability to accommodate or recover from these threats but also to tap into opportunities for strengthening long-term capabilities. One approach to enhancing resilience to enhance food security and nutrition is building an evidence base to better understand the various types of smallholders, threats to agriculture production and the associated risks to food security and nutrition and household food preferences. Unfortunately, such data in many African countries is still unavailable or has not been shared publicly. In this paper, we describe data that were collected in Nwoya district, Northern Uganda in December 2017. These data can be used to assess the relationship between resilience of farm households to climatic risks and their food and nutrition security.

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          Most cited references2

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          Incentives and the Diffusion of Agricultural Knowledge: Experimental Evidence from Northern Uganda

          We present results of a randomized evaluation that assesses the effects of different incentives for diffusion of agricultural knowledge by smallholders in northern Uganda. Randomly‐selected disseminating farmers (DFs) from a large sample of villages are assigned to one of three experimental arms: ( a ) training about climate smart agriculture, ( b ) training plus a material reward for knowledge diffusion, and ( c ) training plus a reputational gain for knowledge diffusion. We find that leveraging somebody's reputation (or social recognition) has a positive impact on DFs' experimentation and diffusion effort. This impact is stronger than that measured in the private material rewards treatment.
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            Survey data of intra-household decision making and smallholder agricultural production in Northern Uganda and Southern Tanzania

            This article provides a description of intra-household survey data that were collected in Uganda and Tanzania in 2014 and 2015, respectively. The surveys were implemented using a structured questionnaire administered among 585 households in Uganda and 608 in Tanzania. Information on decision making processes in agricultural production was collected from the principal adult male and female decision-makers in each household. The survey consisted of two parts. Firstly, the decision-makers, both male and female of each household were jointly interviewed. Secondly, individual interviews were carried out, questioning the decision-makers separately. The datasets include both household and individual level data containing numeric, categorical and string variables. The datasets have been shared publicly on the Harvard dataverse.
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              Author and article information

              Contributors
              Journal
              Data Brief
              Data Brief
              Data in Brief
              Elsevier
              2352-3409
              12 March 2019
              April 2019
              12 March 2019
              : 23
              : 103818
              Affiliations
              [a ]International Centre for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Nairobi, Kenya
              [b ]World Fish, Penang, Malaysia
              [c ]Gulu University, Uganda
              Author notes
              []Corresponding author. c.mwungu@ 123456cgiar.org
              Article
              S2352-3409(19)30169-6 103818
              10.1016/j.dib.2019.103818
              6661252
              31372462
              09cf2518-9848-44ba-a857-db55377cc823
              © 2019 The Author(s)

              This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

              History
              : 14 January 2019
              : 21 February 2019
              : 1 March 2019
              Categories
              Agricultural and Biological Science

              resilience,nutrition,food security,shocks,uganda
              resilience, nutrition, food security, shocks, uganda

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