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Title
The effects of coffee certification in Kenya |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/2066/142237 |
Date
2015 |
Author(s)
Rijsbergen, B.J. van; Elbers, W.J.; Ruben, R.; Kempen, L.A.C.M. van; Hoebink, P.R.J.; Hamisi Ngutu, M.; Mutwiwa, U.; Njuguna, S.N. |
Contributor(s)
Ruben, R.; Hoebink, P. |
Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext - Sustainability standards like Fair Trade (FT) or Utz certified (Utz) are widely regarded as a promising way of improving smallholder coffee farmer welfare. As yet, the impact of certification remains poorly understood. This chapter presents the findings of the study regarding the impact of FT and Utz in Kenya. The study was carried out in the Kiambu and Nyeri districts of Kenya (Figure 3.1). The study is based on two waves of data collection carried out in 2009 and 2013 with farmers belonging to six cooperative societies: Ndumberi, Tekangu, Kiambaa, Mikari, Rugi and Kiama. This chapter aims to answer the following central research question: What is the impact of FT/Utz involvement at producer and producer organisation level in Kenya? |
Subject(s)
Anthropology and Development Studies |
Publisher
Wageningen: Wageningen Academic Publishers |
Type of publication
Part of book or chapter of book |
Source
Ruben, R.; Hoebink, P. (ed.), Coffee certification in East Africa: Impact on farms, families and cooperatives, pp. 83-126 |
Identifier
10.3920/978-90-8686-805-6_3 |
Repository
Nijmegen - Radbout University of Nijmegen
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Added to C-A: 2024-08-20;15:45:29 |
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