<resource xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.1/metadata.xsd"><identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7910/DVN/IAWC28</identifier><creators><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Bonilla-Findji, Osana</creatorName><givenName>Osana</givenName><familyName>Bonilla-Findji</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0002-6098-000X</nameIdentifier><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security - CCAFS</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Eitzinger, Anton</creatorName><givenName>Anton</givenName><familyName>Eitzinger</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0001-7317-3381</nameIdentifier><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Andrieu, Nadine</creatorName><givenName>Nadine</givenName><familyName>Andrieu</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0001-9558-9302</nameIdentifier><affiliation>Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement - CIRAD</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Jarvis, Andy</creatorName><givenName>Andy</givenName><familyName>Jarvis</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0001-6543-0798</nameIdentifier><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security - CCAFS</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Martínez, Deissy</creatorName><givenName>Deissy</givenName><familyName>Martínez</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0003-2317-8760</nameIdentifier><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security - CCAFS</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Aguilar, Amilcar</creatorName><givenName>Amilcar</givenName><familyName>Aguilar</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0002-5177-6963</nameIdentifier><affiliation>Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza - CATIE</affiliation></creator></creators><titles><title>2018  - CSA Monitoring: Tuma La Dalia Climate-Smart Village (Nicaragua)</title></titles><publisher>Harvard Dataverse</publisher><publicationYear>2019</publicationYear><subjects><subject>Agricultural Sciences</subject><subject>Earth and Environmental Sciences</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4911" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Monitoring</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1361789093890" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Climate Smart Agriculture</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3676" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Households</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1374498089962" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Livelihoods</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_117" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Adaptation</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_10967" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Food Security</subject><subject>Climate Shocks</subject><subject subjectScheme="CIAT Region">Latin America and the Caribbean</subject><subject subjectScheme="CIAT Research Area">Decision and Policy Analysis - DAPA</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4911" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Monitoring</subject><subject schemeURI="http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1361789093890" subjectScheme="AGROVOC">Climate Smart Agriculture</subject></subjects><contributors><contributor contributorType="ContactPerson"><contributorName nameType="Organizational">Bonilla-Findji, Osana</contributorName><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security - CCAFS</affiliation></contributor><contributor contributorType="ContactPerson"><contributorName nameType="Personal">Ortega, Angelly</contributorName><givenName>Angelly</givenName><familyName>Ortega</familyName><affiliation>International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security - CCAFS</affiliation></contributor><contributor contributorType="Producer"><contributorName nameType="Organizational">International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (Flagship 2)</contributorName><affiliation>CGIAR Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security</affiliation></contributor><contributor contributorType="Distributor"><contributorName nameType="Organizational">Climate Smart Technologies and Practices</contributorName><affiliation>CGIAR Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security</affiliation></contributor></contributors><dates><date dateType="Created">2019-12-10</date><date dateType="Submitted">2019-12-10</date><date dateType="Updated">2019-12-18</date><date dateType="Collected">2018-04-16/2018-05-16</date></dates><resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Survey data</resourceType><relatedIdentifiers><relatedIdentifier relationType="IsCitedBy" relatedIdentifierType="Handle">10568/16426</relatedIdentifier></relatedIdentifiers><sizes><size>97280</size><size>12608</size><size>1714982</size><size>17997</size><size>14635</size><size>10655</size><size>5820</size><size>4129</size><size>3737</size><size>1104138</size><size>19938</size><size>9387</size><size>4854</size><size>4320</size><size>19645</size><size>2686</size><size>511</size><size>633</size><size>36864</size><size>604234</size><size>232960</size><size>4033785</size><size>95134</size><size>110568</size><size>78331</size><size>95967</size><size>72981</size><size>336442</size></sizes><formats><format>application/vnd.ms-excel</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>application/pdf</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>application/pdf</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>application/vnd.ms-excel</format><format>application/pdf</format><format>application/msword</format><format>application/pdf</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format></formats><version>1.1</version><rightsList><rights rightsURI="info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess"/><rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0</rights></rightsList><descriptions><description descriptionType="Abstract">This dataset contains the files produced in the implementation of the “Integrated Monitoring Framework for Climate-Smart Agriculture” in the Tuma-La-Dalia Climate Smart Village (Nicaragua) in April 2018.&#xd;
This monitoring framework developed by CCAFS is meant to be deployed annually across the global network of Climate-Smart Villages to gather field-based evidence by tracking the progress on:&#xd;
&lt;ul> &#xd;
&lt;li type= disc> Adoption of CSA practices and technologies, as well as access to climate information services and &#xd;
&lt;li type= disc> Their related impacts at household level (and farm level, in selected sites).&#xd;
This framework proposes standard Descriptive Indicators to track changes in:&#xd;
&lt;ul>&#xd;
&lt;li> 5 enabling dimensions that might affect adoption patterns,&#xd;
&lt;li> A set of 5 CORE indicators at Household level to assess perceived effects of CSA practices on Food Security, Productivity, Income and Climate vulnerability and &#xd;
&lt;li> 4 CORE indicators on Gender aspects (Participation in decision-making, Participation in implementation, Access/control over Resources and work time).&#xd;
&lt;li> At farm level, 7 CORE indicators are suggested to determine farms CSA performance, as well as synergies and trade-offs among the three pillars.&#xd;
&lt;/ul>&#xd;
&lt;/ul>&#xd;
This integrated framework is associated with a cost-effective data collection App (Geofarmer) that allowed capturing information in almost real-time. &#xd;
&lt;br>&#xd;
The survey questionnaire is structured around different thematic modules (Demographic, Livelihoods, Food Security, Climate events, Climate Services, CSA practices, Financial Services) connected to standard CSA metrics and the specific indicators. &#xd;
&lt;br>&#xd;
The framework responds to three main research questions: &#xd;
&lt;ol>&#xd;
&lt;li value="1">Within each CSV community, who adopts which CSA technologies and practices and what are their motivations, enabling/constraining factors?&lt;/li>&#xd;
&lt;li>What are the gender-disaggregated perceived effects of CSA options on farmers’ livelihood (agricultural production, income, food security, food diversity and adaptive capacity) and on key gender dimensions (participation in decision-making, participation in CSA implementation and dis-adoption, control and access over resources and labor)?&lt;/li>&#xd;
&lt;/ol>&#xd;
How does CSA perform at farm level, and what synergies and trade-offs exist (whole farm model analysis)?</description><description descriptionType="Other">Universe: At the time of data collection, all survey participants resided within 7 communities in Olopa Village, Guatemala ("El Consuelo ", " Las Veguitas", " Hilipo", " Aguas Amarillas", " Wasaka abajo", “Guapotalito", " San Benito", or “La Primavera”). &#xd;
Implementation was carried out by locally trained enumerators using the Geofarmer Smart Monitoring App for data collection.&#xd;
The initial sample target was : 140 households, including the ones covered in the initial CCAFS Baseline (HBS).&#xd;
&#xd;
A total of 262 individuals were sampled: 105 adult females, 96 adult males (age of 35 or above), 35 young females and 22 young males (under age of 35). Two adults were surveyed from each household. 4 individuals had unrecorded birth years.</description></descriptions><geoLocations/><fundingReferences><fundingReference><funderName>CCAFS Flagship 2 Climate Smart Technologies and Practices funds 2018</funderName><awardNumber>G135</awardNumber></fundingReference><fundingReference><funderName>CCAFS/CIAT contract with IDRC</funderName><awardNumber>G151</awardNumber></fundingReference></fundingReferences></resource>