Land Size and Land Use for Sustainable Livelihood Security in Coffee Growing Zones; the Case of Kiganjo Sub-location, Gatundu South Sub-county, Kiambu County.
Abstract
Subdivision of agricultural land is perceived to be a threat to food and livelihoods security in
Kenya. It has been related to the decline of the coffee sector in Kenya, which has provoked
discussion surrounding possible causes and solutions for a turn-around of the sector. This
study examined the relationship between coffee production and the continuous subdivision of
agricultural land in the coffee growing area of Kiganjo sub-location. The specific objectives
of this study included examining four factors; inter-generational household land size change;
current land uses and livelihood diversification strategies and their respective financial
returns at household level, and; planning interventions that can ensure sustainable food and
livelihood security in the coffee farming sector. Cross sectional research design method was
used. The target population was coffee farmers in Kiganjo sub-location, and coffee sector key
informants in the county. The existing ten villages in the sub-location were treated as a
geographical cluster. Ten coffee farmers were sampled randomly from each cluster. Key
informants were sampled purposively from the sector, and face to face interviews were
conducted with 97 coffee farmers using a household questionnaire. Three focus group
discussions with women, men and youth were held in the sub-location, and five key
informant interviews conducted. The findings revealed that intergenerational household land
size changed by 75% from 3.89 to 0.97 Ha from generation one to generation two. The same
changed by 76% from 0.97 to 0.23 Ha from generation two to generation three. The change
from generation one to three (grandfather to grandson) is 94% which is 3.89 Ha to 0.23 Ha.
The current land uses were identified as coffee, dairy, avocado, macadamia nut, arrow root,
banana, tree, poultry, maize and bean farming. Of these, coffee had the highest returns
because of the relatively larger land size allocated to its production. The household livelihood
diversification strategies included income from rental units, income from motorcycle taxi,
employment, business enterprises, shop, pension funds, and financial remittances from
relatives. Possible planning interventions from literature review and the field survey are as
follows: i) formulating and enforcing a minimum household land size for coffee production
of between 0.2 Ha and 0.5 Ha per household, ii) establishment of a land banking program
where the government can lease or acquire idle land that can be used for coffee cultivation.
Other measures include iii) adopting of long term (e.g. 25-50 years) land leasing for coffee
cultivation as opposed to freehold land ownership, iv) promoting voluntary land pooling
among brothers and neighbors guided by the minimum land size for coffee production, v)
promoting mixed farming of cash crop, food crop and livestock for diversification. These
measures can be complemented with vi) adoption of urban-based nucleated human settlement
patterns instead of the current scattered rural settlements in order to release land for
agriculture, and vii) encouraging co-operative based extension and marketing services to
guarantee optimal productivity and reliable markets for farm produce. The study recommends
further research to determine i) the economic viability of long-term leasing of land rather than
freehold land ownership for coffee farmers, ii) the implementation of 2010 constitutional
provision that give women and men equal rights to inheritance of family land; and finally iii)
determination of (minimum) household land sizes for food, cash incomes and secure
livelihoods in Kiganjo sub-location in consultation with the people.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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