Basket of Options
Communities select from a menu of crops, livestock, and practices suited to their zone β not a single imposed technology.
How RIPAT closes the gap between agricultural research and farmer adoption β through participatory projects built on real community choice.
Researchers develop improved seeds, better practices, and new breeds β yet adoption rates among smallholders often remain stubbornly low. RIPAT projects were designed specifically to answer this question in the field.
Conventional extension often promotes a single βbestβ technology from research stations to farmers β without enough participation, context, or follow-up. Farmers may see demonstrations but lack ownership, financing, or options suited to their agro-ecological zone.
Common barriers include:
RIPAT's basket-of-options model ensures farmers genuinely choose technologies that fit their specific needs, resources, and agro-ecological context. One size does not fit all.
See Basket of OptionsCommunities select from a menu of crops, livestock, and practices suited to their zone β not a single imposed technology.
Hands-on demonstrations where farmers learn, compare, and decide what to adopt on their own farms.
35-member groups with peer exchange, VSLA savings, and help-to-self-help spread adoption beyond demo plots.
Formal MoU with local government embeds RIPAT in extension systems for sustainability after projects end.
RIPAT was developed among small-scale farmers in Northern Tanzania by RECODA under the Rockwool Foundation partnership β and has since expanded to multiple regions.
Documented increases in productivity, farmer innovation, and ownership β including endorsements from regional leadership and researchers.
Active work across Arusha, Karatu, Singida, Dodoma, Morogoro, Kilimanjaro, Kigoma, Lindi and beyond β adapting the basket to each context.
Improved banana varieties, OFSP, cassava, sunflower, conservation agriculture, dairy goats, local chicken improvement, and more β chosen by communities.
Financial inclusion and sister groups help farmers fund expansion and support three others through the help-to-self-help philosophy.
Peer-reviewed studies document RIPAT's impact on incomes, child health, nutrition, and technology adoption compared to conventional approaches.
Contact RECODA for training, partnership, or guidance on implementing the RIPAT approach in your community.