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Dive into the research topics where Ulrich Kleih is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrich Kleih.


Journal of Agribusiness in Developing and Emerging Economies | 2018

Shaping, adapting and reserving the right to play: Responding to uncertainty in high quality cassava flour value chains in Nigeria

Richard Lamboll; Adrienne Martin; L.O. Sanni; Kolawole Adebayo; Andrew Graffham; Ulrich Kleih; Louise Abayomi; Andrew Westby

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explain why the high quality cassava flour (HQCF) value chain in Nigeria has not performed as well as expected. The specific objectives are to: analyse important sources of uncertainty influencing HQCF value chains; explore stakeholders’ strategies to respond to uncertainty; and highlight the implications of different adaptation strategies for equity and the environment in the development of the value chain. Design/methodology/approach The authors used a conceptual framework based on complex adaptive systems to analyse the slow development of the value chain for HQCF in Nigeria, with a specific focus on how key stakeholders have adapted to uncertainty. The paper is based on information from secondary sources and grey literature. In particular, the authors have drawn heavily on project documents of the Cassava: Adding Value for Africa project (2008 to present), which is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and on the authors’ experience with this project. Findings Policy changes; demand and supply of HQCF; availability and price of cassava roots; supply and cost of energy are major sources of uncertainty in the chain. Researchers and government have shaped the chain through technology development and policy initiatives. Farmers adapted by selling cassava to rival chains, while processors adapted by switching to rival cassava products, reducing energy costs and vertical integration. However, with uncertainties in HQCF supply, the milling industry has reserved the right to play. Vertical integration offers millers a potential solution to uncertainty in HQCF supply, but raises questions about social and environmental outcomes in the chain. Research limitations/implications The use of the framework of complex adaptive systems helped to explain the development of the HQCF value chain in Nigeria. The authors identified sources of uncertainty that have been pivotal in restricting value chain development, including changes in policy environment, the demand for and supply of HQCF, the availability and price of cassava roots, and the availability and cost of energy for flour processing. Value chain actors have responded to these uncertainties in different ways. Analysing these responses in terms of adaptation provides useful insights into why the value chain for HQCF in Nigeria has been so slow to develop. Social implications Recent developments suggest that the most effective strategy for the milling industry to reduce uncertainty in the HQCF value chain is through vertical integration, producing their own cassava roots and flour. This raises concerns about equity. Until now, it has been assumed that the development of the value chain for HQCF can combine both growth and equity objectives. The validity of this assumption now seems to be open to question. The extent to which these developments of HQCF value chains can combine economic growth, equity and environmental objectives, as set out in the sustainable development goals, is an open question. Originality/value The originality lies in the analysis of the development of HQCF value chains in Nigeria through the lens of complex adaptive systems, with a particular focus on uncertainty and adaptation. In order to explore adaptation, the authors employ Courtney et al.’s (1997) conceptualization of business strategy under conditions of uncertainty. They argue that organisations can assume three strategic postures in response to uncertainty and three types of actions to implement that strategy. This combination of frameworks provides a fresh means of understanding the importance of uncertainty and different actors’ strategies in the development of value chains in a developing country context.


MPRA Paper | 2007

Empowering Smallholder Farmers in Markets: Changing agricultural marketing systems and innovative responses by producer organizations

Gideon Onumah; Junior Davis; Ulrich Kleih; Felicity Proctor


Marine Policy | 2013

Financial services for small and medium-scale aquaculture and fisheries producers

Ulrich Kleih; John Linton; Ana Marr; Murdoch Mactaggart; Diego Naziri; John Orchard


Archive | 2006

The production of fresh produce in Africa for export to the United Kingdom: mapping different value chains

Alan Legge; John Orchard; Andy Graffham; P. Greenhalgh; Ulrich Kleih


The Journal of Agricultural Extension | 2011

Sustainable Inclusion of Smallholders in the Emerging High Quality Cassava Flour Value Chains in Africa: Challenges for Agricultural Extension Services

K I Adebayo; Louise Abayomi; A Abass; N.T. Dziedzoave; Lora Forsythe; R. J. Hillocks; R Gensi; R. W. Gibson; Andrew Graffham; Paul Ilona; Ulrich Kleih; Richard Lamboll; G Mahende; Adrienne Martin; Ge Onumah; Aw Orr; Helena Posthumus; L.O. Sanni; V Sandifolo; Andrew Westby


Uganda Journal of Agricultural Sciences | 2004

Farmers’ and traders’ sources of market information in Lira district

Ulrich Kleih; Geofrey Okoboi; Monica Janowski


Archive | 2003

A guide to the analysis of fish marketing systems using a combination of sub-sector analysis and the sustainable livelihoods approach

Ulrich Kleih; P. Greenhalgh; Nicoliene Oudwater


Journal of Root Crops | 2014

Yam Improvement for Income and Food Security in West Africa: Effectiveness of a multi-disciplinary and multi-institutional team-work

Norbert Maroya; Robert Asiedu; P. Lava Kumar; Djana B. Mignouna; Antonio Lopez-Montes; Ulrich Kleih; D. Phillips; F. Ndiame; J. Ikeorgu; E. Otoo


Archive | 2002

Rural Non-Farm Employment in Madhya Pradesh. Findings of a ParticipatoryRural Appraisal in 8 Villages

Richa Som; Ulrich Kleih; Yogesh Kumar; Surendra Kumar Jena


Archive | 2001

Combining quantitative and qualitative survey work. Methodological framework, practical issues, and case studies

N. Marsland; I. M. Wilson; S. Abeyasekera; Ulrich Kleih; J. Lawson-McDowall; R. W. Burn; P. Golob; C. E. Barahona; S. Henderson; C. Conroy; D. Jeffries; H. Warburton; K. Oppong-Nkrumah; E. Fredua Antoh

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John Orchard

University of Greenwich

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Alan Marter

University of Greenwich

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John Linton

University of Greenwich

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L.O. Sanni

Federal University of Agriculture

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