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Research Overview

5 Total Publications
3 Publication Types
1 Research Areas
0 Departments

Showing 5 of 5 publications

Research Article

Some Love Them, Others Hate Them: Understanding Farmers’ Tree Planting Decisions in Scotland

Albert Mvula | Katrin Prager | Josie Geris
July 2025
Department of Geography and Environment

Agroforestry is increasingly recognized as a sustainable agricultural land use system with potential to sequester carbon, create and repair habitats, enhance biodiversity and offer environmental and socio-economic benefits, including improved
agricultural productivity.

Book

Integrating Agroforestry into Scotland’s Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Policies

Albert Mvula, Katrin Prager, Josie Geris
February 2025
Department of Geography and Environment

It is widely recognised that transforming our food systems into more climate-smart and
sustainable practices is essential for achieving beneficial outcomes for both people and nature.

Journal Article

Assessing on-Farm Impacts of the Deep Bed Farming System on Soil and Water Conservation, and Maize Yields among Smallholder Farmers in Malawi

Albert Mvula, Alan Dixon and Ian Maddock

Malawi’s vulnerability to climate change and declining soil fertility underscores the
need for climate-smart, soil-conserving agricultural practices. In Malawi, the deep bed
farming (DBF) system offers promising solutions for smallholder farmers facing these
challenges. This study evaluated the effectiveness of DBF in improving soil and water
conservation and maize productivity in Malawi.

Journal Article

Farmer Experiences of Tiyeni’s ‘Deep-Bed Farming’ Conservation Agriculture System in Malawi

Albert Mvula & Alan Dixon

In the context of increasing NGO interest in the capacity of conservation agriculture methods to support sustainable agriculture across sub-Saharan Africa, this paper explores the experiences of farmers (n = 111) adopting the Tiyeni NGO’s deep-bed farming (DBF) system in northern Malawi.

Book

A Functional Landscape Approach to Managing Wetland Social-Ecological Systems: Experiences from the Kankhulukulu Project in Malawi

Alan Dixon, Albert Mvula and Rachael Carrie

Wetlands play a critical role throughout sub-Saharan Africa in providing a range of ecosystem services that support and sustain people’s livelihoods – both through their direct contribution of provisioning services such as agriculture, water and livestock fodder, and through the regulating and supporting services that underpin these (MA 2005; Wood et al. 2013; Dixon 2018).

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