Journal of Community Mobilization and Sustainable Development
  • Year: 2021
  • Volume: 16
  • Issue: 1

Development and Standardization of Perception Scales for Farmers and Extensionists Regarding Impact of Climate Change on Nutrition

  • Author:
  • Satyapriya1, Sitaram Bishnoi2, Sunita Singh1, K.N. Singh3, Mrinmoy Ray4, Shashi Dahiya5, Shantanu Kumar Dubey6, Atar Singh7, Prasannajit Mishra8, Biswaranjan Pattanaik9, Ravi Shankar10, Rubeka10, Monika Yadav10, Jaya Pandey11, Vaibhav Rai11, Swatantra Pratap Singh12, Subrat Kumar Mahapatra13, Premlata Singh14
  • Total Page Count: 11
  • Published Online: Sep 9, 2021
  • Page Number: 234 to 244

1Principal Scientist

10SRF

11SRF, ICAR-IASRI, New Delhi

12SRF, ICAR-ATARI, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh

13SRF, OUAT, Bhubaneswar, Odisha

14Principal Scientist & Head, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi

2Scientist

3Principal Scientist & Head

4Scientist

5Senior Scientist

6Principal Scientist

7Director

8Joint Director Extension

9Senior Scientist & Head, KVK, Jagatsinghpur

*Corresponding author email id: srext2011@gmail.com

Abstract

While climate change is ravaging our planet, its nutritional health which is going to be hit even harder. Food is going to be more expensive, less nutritious and scarcer. The reduced nutritional quality of important crop s could mark the beginning of a looming nutritional health crisis. Climate change is not only reducing yields, but also sapping nutrients from our meals. If climate change is predicted to cut access to nutrients then food and nutritional security is growing concern and we need to understand perceptions and implications of this burning issue for stakeholders especially farmers and extensions. The objective of the study was to develop and validate scales to study these perceptions of farmers and Extensionists regarding impact of climate change on nutrition. The locale selected for the study was from States of Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Odisha due to their nutritional vulnerability status. The sample size constituted of 100 farmers from these villages and extensionists from Krishi Vigyan Kendras and line departments of the state who were selected by random sampling technique. A total of 69 items were selected from review of literature. These were further reduced to 43 based on expert’s judgments. The items were finally reduced to 16 items for farmers and 24 items for extensionists by statistical analysis using Mokken’s Scaling Analysis. Loevinger’s coefficient was calculated for item H (Hi); item pair H (Hij) and for the overall scale (Hs). By this means, and based on the mean scores on items by individuals, a set of items were selected. Items which had Hs>0.4 were selected. These scales can be used by various stakeholders for designing interventions for climate and nutrition smart agriculture. There is a need for agri-nutri education for consumers and farmers, especially the women in India which has a triple burden of malnutrition. Synergies of the climate and nutrition agendas need to be built for human and planet health. The implications are huge. Climate change and agriculture needs to be seen through a nutrition and gender lens for convergence to ensure food and nutritional security.

Keywords

Climate change, Food systems, Nutrition, Nutritional security, Perception, Extensionists, Farmers, Mokken scale analysis