Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming

Malaysia aims to achieve full self-sufficiency in beef and mutton, which currently below 50%. This will be achieved by promoting innovative husbandry practices among small ruminant farmers to enhance production and productivity. Despite government initiatives, small ruminant farmers in Selangor, Mal...

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Main Authors: Man, Norsida, Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira, Shin, Yee Siaw, Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira
Format: Article
Published: Human Resource Management Academic Research Society 2024
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/107983/
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author Man, Norsida
Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira
Shin, Yee Siaw
Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira
author_facet Man, Norsida
Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira
Shin, Yee Siaw
Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira
author_sort Man, Norsida
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Malaysia aims to achieve full self-sufficiency in beef and mutton, which currently below 50%. This will be achieved by promoting innovative husbandry practices among small ruminant farmers to enhance production and productivity. Despite government initiatives, small ruminant farmers in Selangor, Malaysia, continue to rely on conventional husbandry practices, resulting in low dairy production and productivity due to lack of knowledge and skills to adopt advanced husbandry practices and innovations. Therefore, this study aims to determine the social, communication and physiological factors influencing the adoption of both husbandry practices and innovations. A total of 250 small ruminant farmers were selected as respondents through simple random sampling. Data was gathered through interviews guided by a structured questionnaire and personal observations. The findings indicate that most ranchers have a high level of perception towards social, communication, and psychological factors influencing the adoption of husbandry practices and innovations. The study recommends that the effort of government support through extension services is crucial to strengthen the small ruminant industry, enabling local production to achieve a self-sufficiency level of 50%, ensuring sufficient domestic supply and reducing dependence on fluctuating imports, thereby meeting the increasing demand for ruminant-based products. Future research could investigate the effectiveness of government-supported strategies and policies in achieving targeted self-sufficiency and their impact on small ruminant industry stability.
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institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling upm-1079832024-09-26T04:31:07Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/107983/ Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming Man, Norsida Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira Shin, Yee Siaw Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira Malaysia aims to achieve full self-sufficiency in beef and mutton, which currently below 50%. This will be achieved by promoting innovative husbandry practices among small ruminant farmers to enhance production and productivity. Despite government initiatives, small ruminant farmers in Selangor, Malaysia, continue to rely on conventional husbandry practices, resulting in low dairy production and productivity due to lack of knowledge and skills to adopt advanced husbandry practices and innovations. Therefore, this study aims to determine the social, communication and physiological factors influencing the adoption of both husbandry practices and innovations. A total of 250 small ruminant farmers were selected as respondents through simple random sampling. Data was gathered through interviews guided by a structured questionnaire and personal observations. The findings indicate that most ranchers have a high level of perception towards social, communication, and psychological factors influencing the adoption of husbandry practices and innovations. The study recommends that the effort of government support through extension services is crucial to strengthen the small ruminant industry, enabling local production to achieve a self-sufficiency level of 50%, ensuring sufficient domestic supply and reducing dependence on fluctuating imports, thereby meeting the increasing demand for ruminant-based products. Future research could investigate the effectiveness of government-supported strategies and policies in achieving targeted self-sufficiency and their impact on small ruminant industry stability. Human Resource Management Academic Research Society 2024 Article PeerReviewed Man, Norsida and Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira and Shin, Yee Siaw and Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira (2024) Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 14 (2). pp. 954-971. ISSN 2222-6990 https://hrmars.com/index.php/IJARBSS/article/view/19850/Farmers-Social-Communication-and-Psychological-Factors-Towards-Adoption-of-Husbandry-Practices-and-Innovations-in-Small-Ruminant-Farming 10.6007/ijarbss/v14-i2/19850
spellingShingle Man, Norsida
Yusuf, Munifah Siti Amira
Shin, Yee Siaw
Mohd Affandi, Nurul Athira
Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title_full Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title_fullStr Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title_full_unstemmed Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title_short Farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
title_sort farmers' social, communication and psychological factors towards adoption of husbandry practices and innovations in small ruminant farming
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/107983/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/107983/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/107983/