Integrated Crop Production Strategies for Enhancing Household Nutritional Security and Family Wellbeing
Saba Kausar
Govt. Girls P.G. Collage, Hamirpur, India.
Athar Husain Warsi
Krishi Vigyan Kendra Hathras, Chandra Shekhar Azad University of Agriculture and Technology, Kanpur, India.
Balveer Singh *
Krishi Vigyan Kendra Hathras, Chandra Shekhar Azad University of Agriculture and Technology, Kanpur, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Integrated Crop Production (ICP) strategies offer a holistic framework to address food insecurity, malnutrition, and climate variability among smallholder farming households in developing regions. This review Article highlights how ICP synergizes agroecological principles, such as crop diversification and rotations, with sustainable intensification techniques like precision input management, integrated pest and nutrient management, and water-efficient practices. By fostering resilient farming systems, ICP aims to enhance productivity while minimizing environmental degradation.
Evidence from sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia suggests that adopting ICP can boost yields by 20–50% under smallholder conditions. These gains directly expand food availability and generate marketable surpluses, which increase household income and purchasing power for non-food assets. Beyond economic stability, ICP significantly impacts household nutritional security—defined by availability, access, utilization, and stability—by fostering dietary diversity. Diversified cropping systems directly improve micronutrient intake, effectively reducing "hidden hunger" and malnutrition, particularly among vulnerable women and children. Furthermore, ICP contributes to family wellbeing across multiple dimensions, including improved physical health, social cohesion through collective farmer action, human capital development via funded education, and psychological empowerment through increased self-efficacy and resilience. Targeted interventions, such as agricultural training for women, enhance intra-household decision-making agency, which is statistically linked to superior health outcomes for children.
Despite barriers like socio-economic constraints and policy gaps, the integration of innovations such as "Smart Farming" ICT tools and supportive social protection frameworks offers transformative pathways for sustainable development. This review synthesizes these causal pathways, positioning ICP as a vital multifaceted intervention for achieving long-term nutritional security and holistic wellbeing. The abstract effectively covers the core strategies, impacts, and broader implications of ICP for smallholder development.
Keywords: Integrated crop production, nutritional security, family wellbeing, crop diversification, sustainable intensification, smallholder farming