Metadata last updated on Oct 21, 2021
The research of Integrated Pest Management in Bangladesh was carried out by the World Bank in the summer of 2003. Structured questionnaires were used to collect information on conventional and IPM farming techniques, pesticide use and practices, applicator precautions and damage-averting behavior, health effects and environmental impacts. The survey was designed and supervised by the World Bank team, and conducted by the Development Policy Group in Bangladesh. To minimize reporting bias, the survey was conducted under the agreement that the team would not reveal the identity of the farmers surveyed or the respondents who participated. To provide greater depth, 126 randomly selected rice farmers (102 land owners + 24 land owners cum field workers), who currently use IPM were also interviewed. An IPM farmer is identified as practicing any of the following methods: organic production; biological control; smoke; light traps; rotation of crops; manual clearing; and enemy plants to control pest attacks. Conventional farmers use none of these methods.

IPM farmers in districts with significant IPM participation were surveyed: Rajshahi and Rangpur in the Rajshahi division (Northwest), Comilla in Chittagong division (East), Jessore in Khulna division (West), and Kishoreganj in Dhaka division (North).
Metadata
View More
Data Access and Licensing
Classification: Public
This dataset is classified as Public under the Access to Information Classification Policy. Users inside and outside the Bank can access this dataset.
License: Research Data License
This dataset is licensed under Research Data License
Statistics
Views (165)
Downloads (0)
Share Metadata
The information on this page (the dataset metadata) is also available in these formats.
EmailJSON
Emergency Contact Number (US): (202) 458-8888|© 2022 The World Bank Group, All Rights Reserved