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Farmer-herder conflicts and food insecurity: Evidence from rural Nigeria

Amaka Nnaji, Wanglin Ma, Nazmun N. Ratna, Alan Renwick

2022Agricultural and Resource Economics Review46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Food security in many developing countries has been threatened by several factors such as unequal land distribution, ineffective land reform policies, inefficient agricultural value chains, and an increasing number of climate disasters. In Nigeria, these threats are exacerbated by rapid population growth and extreme weather events, which have resulted in farmer-herder conflicts in most agrarian communities. This paper examines the differential impacts of the incidence and severity of farmer-herder resource use conflicts on food insecurity of rural households in Nigeria. We employ a two-stage predictor substitution model to estimate survey data collected from 401 rural households in Nigeria. The empirical results show that both the incidence and the severity of farmer-herder conflicts significantly increase food insecurity, and the severity of these conflicts has a larger impact than their incidence. The estimates of the conditional mixed process models confirm the robustness of our results. Additional analysis reveals that the incidence and severity of farmer-herder conflicts positively and significantly affect food insecurity, measured by the number of days with limited varieties of food eaten. Our findings highlight the importance of policy interventions that address ongoing farmer-herder conflicts in affected countries like Nigeria to enhance food security from a sustainable development perspective.

Topics & Concepts

Food securityAgricultureFood insecurityDevelopment economicsPopulationGeographyEconomicsEconomic growthSocioeconomicsEnvironmental healthMedicineArchaeologyAgricultural risk and resilienceFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsEnergy and Environment Impacts
Farmer-herder conflicts and food insecurity: Evidence from rural Nigeria | Litcius