Evaluation of Plantwise Kenya: 36-Month Follow-Up Report
Published: September, 2018
External publication
This document presents the endline data collection and analysis for the evaluation of Plantwise Kenya. American Institutes for Research (AIR), with support from American University and Research Solutions Africa (RSA), conducted a mixed-methods evaluation of PW-K. Qualitative methods assessed the changes that PW-K brings to the Kenyan plant health system and evaluated the fidelity of the PW implementation in the field. Quantitative methods identified farm-level impacts using an experimental approach based on the expansion of plant clinics in 2014 and 2015 in 13 counties in the country. The data collection plan involved baseline data and two rounds of follow-up data (at 12 and 36 months). Baseline and midline 12-month follow-up data were collected in 2014 and 2015, respectively, and have been analyzed in previous reports.1 The final round of follow-up data was collected in 2017 and is analyzed in this report.
Evaluation of Plantwise Kenya: 36-Month Follow-Up Report
Type External publication
Published in American Institutes for Research (AIR) report
Language English
Year 2018
Related projects
Plantwise
Worldwide, over 500 million smallholder farmers provide food for two-thirds of the earth’s growing population. Achieving a zero hunger world by 2030 depends on increasing the productivity of these smallholder farmers – but their crops face a significant threat. Yearly, an estimated 40% of crops grown worldwide are lost to pests. If we could reduce crop losses by just 1%, we could potentially feed millions more people. The lack of access to timely, appropriate and actionable extension advice makes it a fundamental challenge for farmers to get the right information at the right time to reduce crop losses.
Start: 01/01/11