Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Main Campus Library | University of Eastern Africa, Baraton | Spc Hg 3881.5 .W57 no.3776 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 60159 |
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Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no. 3765 Privatization : | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3766 Do workers' remittances reduce the probability of current account reversals / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3771 Labor market distortions in Cote d'Ivoire : | Spc Hg 3881.5 .W57 no.3776 Health effects and pesticide perception as determinants of pesticide use : | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3814 A normal relationship" : | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3817 Unpackaging demand for water service quality : | Spc Hg 3881.5 .W57 no.3822 Telecommunications performance, reforms, and governance / |
Also available online.
"In a recent survey of 820 Boro (winter rice),potato, ban, eggplant, cabbage, sugarcane, and mango farmers in Bangladesh, over 47 percent of farmers were found to be overusing pesticides. With only 4 percent of farmers formally trained in pesticide use or handling, and over 87 percent openly admitting to using little or no protective measures while applying pesticides, overuse is potentially a threatening problem to farmer health as well as the environment. To model pesticide overuse, the authors used a 3-equation, trivariate probity framework, with health effects and misperception of pesticide risk as endogenous dummy variables. Health effects (the first equation)were found to be strictly a function of the amount of pesticides used in production, while misperception of pesticide risk (the second equation)was determined by health impairments from pesticides and the toxicity of chemi
Includes bibliographical references.
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