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An Economic Assessment of Banana Genetic Improvement and ...

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APPENDIX E<br />

Village Social Structure in Ug<strong>and</strong>a<br />

Enid Katungi<br />

The overwhelming significance <strong>of</strong> farmer-to-farmer networks to the exchange <strong>of</strong> planting<br />

material <strong>and</strong> information about recommended management practices underscores the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> village social structures in determining the use <strong>of</strong> banana technologies. This<br />

appendix briefly discusses the current state <strong>of</strong> local social structure in the selected banana<br />

producing areas <strong>of</strong> Ug<strong>and</strong>a, focusing specifically on village homogeneity (in terms <strong>of</strong> ethnicity<br />

<strong>and</strong> religion) <strong>and</strong> the participation in associations by agricultural households. There is evidence<br />

that information sharing among agricultural households depends on the characteristics<br />

<strong>of</strong> the social structures in which they live, <strong>and</strong> that some village norms are more conducive to<br />

sharing information <strong>and</strong> technology transfer or adoption. More extensive information about<br />

social capital <strong>and</strong> household interconnectedness is found in Katungi (2006).<br />

A high degree <strong>of</strong> social homogeneity, expressed in terms <strong>of</strong> domination by a single ethnic<br />

group, 1 is apparent in Ug<strong>and</strong>a (Table E.1). Highl<strong>and</strong> villages were found to be more homogenous<br />

(more than 90 percent in one ethnic group) than lowl<strong>and</strong> villages. Only 4 out <strong>of</strong> 20 villages<br />

surveyed had less than 50 percent <strong>of</strong> households from a single ethnic group, <strong>and</strong> all were<br />

found in the lowl<strong>and</strong>s. According to key informants, the ethnic homogeneity in these villages<br />

was affected by the importation <strong>of</strong> labor from other regions to work in commercial crops (c<strong>of</strong>fee<br />

<strong>and</strong> cotton), sugar factories, or railway construction during the colonial period. here> 1near

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