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Rapid Rural Appraisal How to find out what

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Rapid Rural Appraisal How to find out what s going on! Michael Wilcox Economic Development Specialist _____ Department of Agricultural Economics – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rapid Rural Appraisal How to find out what


1
Rapid Rural AppraisalHow to find out whats
going on!
Forbes Walker Environmental Soils Specialist ________________________ Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science Michael Wilcox Economic Development Specialist ________________________ Department of Agricultural Economics
2
Overview
  • What is Rapid Rural Appraisal (RRA)?
  • Why do we need RRA?
  • Planning for a RRA
  • Some simple RRA techniques
  • Semi-structured interviewing
  • Mapping and modeling
  • Seasonal and historical diagramming
  • Preference ranking

3
Rapid Rural Appraisal
  • Series of techniques for "quick and dirty"
    research
  • Compared to quantitative survey techniques
    generate results
  • Less apparent precision
  • Greater evidential value
  • More efficient and cost-effective
  • Particularly useful for learning about
    agricultural systems

4
Why Use It?
  • You may think you know the answers, but what is
    the question?
  • Learn about the agricultural production system
  • Identify constraints and opportunities in the
    local agricultural systems
  • Better identify issues in target population

5
The Process
  • Explore the farming system
  • Identify the target population
  • Identify the problem
  • Investigate the nature of the problem
  • Explore possible solutions

6
Preparations
  • What are the objectives of the exercise(s)
  • Why is the work being done?
  • What type of information do you need?
  • Define the study area
  • Province
  • District
  • Community
  • Review secondary data
  • Reports, maps, photos
  • UN, Govt., NGOs etc.

7
Preparations (cntd)
  • Direct observation
  • Learn about the area
  • Only a starting point
  • Do not assume you know!
  • Prepare check-lists

8
Check-Lists
  • General information
  • Agro-ecological zones
  • Climate
  • Main economic activities of local population
  • Socio-economic information
  • Distribution of assets
  • Gender roles
  • Land tenure system
  • Interest groups
  • Labor use patterns
  • Access to services and markets
  • Cultural attitudes towards farming
  • Farming system information

9
Check-Lists Farming system information
  • Physical resource base land, soil, water,
    vegetation, etc.
  • Land use patterns agriculture, livestock,
    forestry activities
  • Cropping patterns crops, varieties, patterns,
    rotations, varietal preferences
  • Assets available (e.g., major tools)
  • Yields per crop per unit of land
  • Quantities of physical, variable inputs used per
    crop per unit of land
  • Labor used per crop per unit of land
  • Prices for inputs, outputs, labor, land, capital

10
Planning Community Meetings
  • Location of meeting
  • Mosque or other communal meeting place
  • Private compound
  • Seating is important
  • Time
  • Who can and cannot attend?
  • Who will facilitate exercises?
  • Group or individual meetings?
  • Culturally will everyone participate equally?

11
Know Your Audience!
  • Butawata, Uganda
  • Community meeting
  • Men dominated discussions
  • Split into two groups by gender
  • Asked to discuss and prioritize issues
  • Women ranked labor shortage 1
  • Men did not even mention labor!
  • Bring two groups together
  • Share what was discussed
  • Discuss issues

12
Common RRA Techniques
  • Semi-structured interviewing
  • Mapping and diagramming
  • Seasonal and historical diagramming
  • Preference ranking

13
Semi-structured interviewing
  • Semi-structured interviewing is a form of guided
    interviewing
  • Some of the questions are predetermined
  • New questions are usually generated during the
    interview
  • Use a checklist of questions as a flexible guide
    rather than a formal questionnaire
  • Interviews take the form of discussions
  • Interviewer and interviewee learn from each other

14
During the Interview
  • Use checklist to stimulate discussion and a
    participatory dialogue
  • Ask questions around existing information on the
    community, or visual material such as diagrams,
    photographs, or maps
  • Use open-ended questions who? why? what? when?
    where? how?
  • Listen!!!
  • Take some notes during the interview
  • Better to complete notes immediately after the
    discussion

15
After the Meeting
  • Finish the discussion politely
  • Have evening brain-storming sessions with the
    team to complete notes and to prepare for the
    following day
  • Establish report writing procedures with the team
    making sure enough time is allocated

16
Mapping and Diagramming
  • Simple schematic devices
  • Present information in a condensed and readily
    understandable visual form
  • A simplified model of reality
  • Draw in the presence of different categories of
    people (women and men, young and old, etc.), as
    their perceptions, viewpoints and information
    will often differ

17
Mapping and Diagramming (cntd)
  • Greatly simplify complex information
  • Facilitate communication
  • Stimulate discussion
  • Increase consensus among community members
  • Are an excellent way of involving community
    members

18
Uganda
19
Information Collected with Mapping
  • Physical infrastructure
  • Social infrastructure
  • Cropping systems
  • Water sources
  • Woodlands
  • Major physical features
  • Land tenure systems
  • Grazing areas

20
Ethiopia
21
Participants, Location and Equipment
  • Groups should generally not be too large (no more
    than 15)
  • Select a comfortable place, free from
    distractions
  • Equipment Maps can be prepared with a variety of
    tools on a variety of surfaces. The most common
    combinations are
  • sticks, stones, leaves, etc. on cleared smooth
    areas of ground
  • colored chalk on cement floors
  • colored pens on paper

22
Mapping
  • Explain the purpose of the exercise
  • Guidance should be kept to the minimum - give
    some assistance with the first features
  • The map is a tool discussion can take place on
    its features and questions can be raised about
    items on the checklist
  • Copy the map when it is completed
  • A copy should be shown to the participants and a
    copy should be left with them

23
Transects
  • A diagram that is produced during a walking
    discussion with villagers
  • Shows the key features of different land use
    zones in a community
  • Gain a basic understanding of the agriculture in
    an area constraints opportunities
  • Check-lists are useful soils, slopes, food
    crops, cash crops, land-tenure, livestock, water
    etc.

24
Uganda
25
Seasonal and Daily Activity Calendars
  • Diagrams showing the timing and/or importance of
    events over a period of time (a year, a
    production season, a day)
  • Examples
  • Food availability
  • Rainfall and temperature
  • Production and post-harvest activities
  • Prices
  • Marketing
  • Income
  • Labor or levels of work activity
  • Debt

26
Seasonal Calendar (example from North Kordofan,
Sudan)
27
Daily Activity Clocks Zimbabwe
Women - Winter Dry Season
Women - Summer Wet Season
28
Daily Activity Clocks Zimbabwe
Men - Summer Wet Season
Men - Winter Dry Season
29
Pair-wise Ranking
  • List set of priorities, compare each priority
    with all others

  Problem Problem Number Problem Number Problem Number Problem Number Problem Number Problem Number Score Rank
    1 2 3 4 5 6 Score Rank
1 Lack of Capital   2 3 4 5 6 0 6th
2 Changing climate     2 4 5 6 2 4th
3 Planning farm activities     4 3 6 2 4th
4 Lack of market     5 6 3 2nd
5 Pests and diseases     6 3 2nd
6 Soil fertility             5 1st
30
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