cover
Contact Name
Sahrain Bumulo
Contact Email
sahrain@ung.ac.id
Phone
+6281355082348
Journal Mail Official
drsj@ung.ac.id
Editorial Address
Lt. II Jurusan Sosiologi Fakultas Ilmu Sosial Universitas Negeri Gorontalo. Jl. Jenderal Sudirman No.6, Kota Gorontalo, Provinsi Gorontalo 96128, Indonesia
Location
Kota gorontalo,
Gorontalo
INDONESIA
Dynamics of Rural Society Journal
ISSN : -     EISSN : 29870844     DOI : https://doi.org/10.37905/drsj.v1i1
Core Subject : Social,
1. Agrarian Studies 2. Group Dynamics of Peasant and Fishermen 3. Empowerment and Social Welfare 4. Rural Community Development 5. Social Capital 6. Remote Indigenous Community 7. Social Conflict 8. Social Structure and Stratification 9. Village Government 10. Poverty and Social Inequality 11. Social Identity (Ethnicity, Religion, Race, and Group) 12. Transmigration 13. Gender and Division of Labor 14. Social Solidarity 15. Social Change 16. Livelihood Strategy 17. Environmental Sustainability and Natural Resources 18. Family and Kinship System 19. History, Customs, Traditions, Culture, and Local Wisdom 20. Social Transformation 21. Covid-19 22. Rural Economic Studies 23. Education 24. Domestic violence 25. Lifestyle 26. Rural Area Planning 27. Rural Policy and Politics 28. Village Fund
Articles 42 Documents
Determinants of smallholder farmers’ responsiveness to agroecological practices and principles in Ethiopia, Kenya and Madagascar Olupot, Max; Oladele, Oladimeji Idowu
Dynamics of Rural Society Journal Vol. 5 No. 1 (2027): Article in Press, January 2027
Publisher : Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Gorontalo State University, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37905/drsj.v5i1.161

Abstract

Smallholder farmers across East Africa face significant challenges in fully adopting agroecological practices, despite their demonstrated benefits for soil health, biodiversity, water conservation, and farm resilience. This study examined the determinants of smallholder farmers' responsiveness to agroecological principles and practices in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Madagascar using a sample of 993 farmers. A multi-stakeholder cross-sectional survey was conducted using a detailed, structured, and expert-validated questionnaire administered to smallholder farmers, considering multidimensional variation at both the farm and system levels. Multiple regression analysis and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) were employed to explore the underlying dimensions of adoption and predictors of responsiveness. The results revealed substantial variation across countries. In Kenya, farmers implemented 12 or more principles, whereas in Madagascar and Ethiopia, adoption was moderate, with lower uptake of agroecological principles. Farmer Field Schools (FFS) influenced adoption primarily through social learning, whereby farmers collaboratively experiment, observe outcomes, and share experiences, rather than through top-down technology transfer. Regression analysis showed that knowledge co-creation, education level, agroecology-specific land use, and incentives for participation in and sharing of agroecological practices were significant predictors of responsiveness, while structural constraints played a moderating role. These findings highlight the need to prioritize extension models that are inclusive, participatory, and adaptive, linking farmer education, locally appropriate land-use strategies, and targeted incentives to overcome structural barriers and ensure agroecology delivers both ecological resilience and improved livelihoods. PCA extracted seven components—ecological practices, extension methods, social learning, institutional enhancements, experiential knowledge, adoption behaviors, and gender/culture—which explained 63.38% of the total variance. The study concludes that farmers' responsiveness to agroecological principles is shaped by a dynamic interplay of structural, behavioral, and institutional factors. Strengthening participatory extension systems, co-creation platforms, and incentive frameworks can enhance uptake. These findings provide evidence-based insights for designing context-specific interventions to accelerate agroecological transitions towards sustainable agriculture.
Governance fragmentation and food security in South Africa’s Upper Umzimvubu River catchment: A network governance perspective Mubangizi, Betty Claire
Dynamics of Rural Society Journal Vol. 5 No. 1 (2027): Article in Press, January 2027
Publisher : Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Gorontalo State University, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37905/drsj.v5i1.147

Abstract

The Upper uMzimvubu River catchment in South Africa’s Eastern Cape faces persistently low food productivity, driven by land degradation and the escalating impacts of climate change. This study investigates how governance dynamics shape food security outcomes on rural communal land, focusing on the potential of collaborative, multi-level, and networked governance approaches to address systemic vulnerabilities and enhance local food production. Using a review-based methodology grounded in both empirical insights and scholarly literature on food governance, the research applies a network governance framework to examine how state and non-state actors coordinate interventions in the food security landscape. The findings indicate that food insecurity in the catchment arises not only from environmental and socio-economic stressors but is also exacerbated by fragmented governance, policy incoherence, and institutional weaknesses. In this context, civil society networks play a central role in polycentric governance, often bridging gaps left by formal institutions. The study advocates a decentralised, participatory, and integrated model of food security governance, emphasising secure land tenure, climate-resilient development planning, and improved coordination among diverse stakeholders. By integrating perspectives from environmental governance, rural development, and land tenure studies, this research provides a transdisciplinary lens on food insecurity. It demonstrates how combining policy analysis, local knowledge, and institutional theory can foster collaboration among academics, policymakers, and civil society actors, ultimately enabling more effective responses to the complex challenges of rural food insecurity in South Africa.