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The influence of independent and intervening variables on adoption of recommended maize varieties in Tanzania

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dc.creator Msuya, C.P.
dc.creator Düvel, G.H.
dc.creator Rwambali, E.G.
dc.date 2018-01-03T13:20:48Z
dc.date 2018-01-03T13:20:48Z
dc.date 2014
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:50:09Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:50:09Z
dc.identifier 0856 668X
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/1982
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/89855
dc.description Tanzania Journal of Agricultural Sciences 2015, Vol. 13(1) : 26-40
dc.description Njombe is one of the districts in Tanzania that suffers from the problem of poor adoption of recommended maize varieties. The study was conducted to investigate the influence of independent and intervening variables in determining the adoption behaviour of recommended maize varieties among maize growers in Njombe District of Tanzania. The study employed a cross sectional research design where data were collected from 113 respondents randomly selected to represent other maize growers from four villages namely, Kibena, Ulembwe, Uwemba and Igagala. The findings show that each investigated intervening variable has influence on adoption of recommended maize varieties as expected. They explain 86.6 percent of the variation in adoption (R2 =0.866, p=0.000). In particular, the NT (Beta = 0.659, p=0.000) and the efficiency misperception (Beta = -0.232, p=0.008) that make the biggest contribution. On the other hand, most of the independent variables investigated have no influence except for the level of education and area used to grow maize. The total contribution of independent variable towards explaining the variance in adoption is only 18.7 percent. This is reflected in the significant R2 of 0.187, which implies that the total influence of intervening variables highly explains the influence compared to that of independent variables. This indicates that the intervening variables are the best predictors of the adoption behaviour and the influence of independent variables is manifested in the adoption behaviour through the intervening variables as postulated in Duvels (1991) model of behaviour determinants. This calls for further testing of the model in different social cultural settings and crops to see its relevance in determining the adoption behaviour.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.subject Independent variables
dc.subject Intervening variables
dc.subject Adoption
dc.subject Recommended maize varieties
dc.title The influence of independent and intervening variables on adoption of recommended maize varieties in Tanzania
dc.type Article


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