Agricultural Information Needs of Rural Women Dwellers at Nilgund Village: A Study

Authors

  • Shilpa S Uplaonkar Assistant Librarian, University of Agricultural Sciences, Dharwad, Karnataka 580005, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/

Keywords:

Women farmers, Agricultural Information Needs of farmers, Rural women farmers, Badami Taluk

Abstract

This paper describes the agriculture information needs of women farmers of nilgund village of Badami taluk, Bagalkot district, Karnataka. Now a day’s woman are involved in all fields and agriculture field is  also one among them, they are actively involving in agriculture operations, they need encouragement  from Government, private or any other agency for latest information sources related to agriculture. The  populations of the study are women farmers. The data were collected by using questionnaire and survey  method. Results discussed on the different type of information required by women farmers in farming  activities. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Belkin, NJ (1978). Information concepts for information science. Journal of Documentation, 34(1), 55-85.

Olorunda, Olufunmilola. O. (2004). World library and information congress: Women's information needs for economic development. Paper presented at the 70th IFLA General Conference and Council. Retrieved April 10, 2011 from http://archive.ifla.org/IV/ifla70/papers/

e-Olorunda.pdf

Elly, Tumsifu & Silayo, Ephraem Epafra (2013). Agricultural information needs and sources of the rural farmers in Tanzania. Library Review, 62(8/9), 547-566.

Bachhav, Nitin Bhagachand (2012) Information needs of the rural farmers: A study from Maharashtra, India; A survey: Library Philosophy and practice (e journals). 866.

Sabo Elizabeth (2007). Agricultural information needs of women farmers in Mubi region, Adamawa State. Journal of Tropical Agriculture, 45 (1-2), 69-71.

Published

2021-10-11

How to Cite

Agricultural Information Needs of Rural Women Dwellers at Nilgund Village: A Study . (2021). Library Progress (International), 41(2), 211–214. https://doi.org/10.48165/