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76 INDEX


Labonne, J., 1 LGAs. See Local government authorities Livestock: management practices, 52, 53t, 55t, 57; values of, 59


Local Fadama Development Committees, 6 Local government authorities (LGAs), 6, 14, 24


Marketing services: providers of, 5, 54, 56t; technologies demanded and adopted, 52, 53t, 57, 63


Medium-term review (MTR), 9–10, 38–40, 62 Microfinance, 40, 62. See also Credit sources Milling machines, 46


Moist savannah zone: income impact of Fadama II in, 42, 62; spillover effects of Fadama II in, 47, 62–63; states included in, 12; technology adoption in, 59. See also Agroecological zones Mosse, D., 1 MTR. See Medium-term review


National Economic Empowerment and Development Strategy, 59–60 National Fadama Development Project. See Fadama II


NGOs. See Nongovernmental organizations Nigeria, Government of: advisory services funding by, 51; poverty reduction strategy of, 59–60; selection of Fadama II participating units, 13–14 Nigeria, map of, 13f


Nonbeneficiaries: advisory services received by, 54, 59–60; characteristics of, 67–68t; propensity score matching of, 18–19; selection for Fadama II evaluation, 15; unobservable characteristics of, 19. See also Spillover effects


Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs): advisory services provided by, 51–52; elite capture of funding, 2


Ostrom, E., 2 Ozor, N., 54


PAA. See Productive-asset acquisition Pastoralists, 4, 8, 59


Physically challenged persons. See Vulnerable groups


Pilot productive-asset acquisition (PPAA), 7–8, 9–10. See also Productive-asset acquisition Platteau, J. P., 2


Poor: credit sources of, 38, 40; income impact of Fadama II on, 45–46, 62. See also Asset terciles; Incomes; Poverty reduction Postproduction activities: agroprocessing, 5, 31, 46; in Fadama II, 5; information


sources, 54, 56t, 59, 60; marketing services, 5, 52, 53t, 54, 56t, 57, 63; technologies demanded and adopted, xiii, 52, 53t, 57, 59, 63


Poverty reduction, 11, 45, 59–60 PPAA. See Pilot productive-asset acquisition Probit models, 21, 24–25, 65t


Production technologies: adoption of, 53t; demand for, 53t, 60; improved crop varieties, 52, 53t, 57; irrigation, 31, 37, 45, 62; providers of, 54, 55t. See also Technology adoption


Productive-asset acquisition (PAA): asset types, 31, 36t; beneficiary contribution for, 8, 38–40; credit sources for, 38; before Fadama II project, 30, 68t; by Fadama User Groups, 28, 29f, 30n, 31, 36–37, 63; future research on, 37–38; impact of Fadama II, 28–31, 29f, 30f, 32–33t, 34–35t, 36–40, 36t, 61, 63; by individuals, 28, 30f, 31, 36, 37; matching funds for, 31, 46, 63; medium-term review of, 9–10; pilot support for, 7–8, 9–10; subprojects of, 10; targeted groups, xiii, 5; technology adoption and, 52, 59 Productive assets: management of, 37–38, 63; rental agreements for, 38 Propensity score matching (PSM), 18–19, 20, 21, 22–23t, 24, 25


PSM. See Propensity score matching Public goods, xiii, 7 Public investments. See Advisory services; Infrastructure investments; Spillover effects


Qamar, K., 57


Radio programming, 54–57 Rainfed land area, 57 Remote locations, 25, 59


Rural infrastructure investments, 7, 10


Senegal, community-driven development in, 2 SFDOs. See State Fadama Development Offices Soil conservation, 57


Soil fertility management technologies, xiii–xiv, 52, 53t, 55t, 57, 59, 63–64 Spillover effects: of advisory services, 54; by agroecological zone, 47, 48t; by asset tercile, 48t; estimation of, 12–13, 24; by gender, 48t; on incomes, xiii, 41f, 47–48, 47f, 48t, 62–63


State Fadama Development Offices (SFDOs), 54, 56–57


States: agroecological zones of, 12; Fadama I participants, 4n, 13f, 14; Fadama II participants, 4, 5–6, 12, 13–14, 13f. See also Local government authorities


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