Published research

This post provides an overview of research with direct and indirect linkages to Intersection Traders operations, impact and design.

Rural development – specifically linked to Intersection Traders

Hill, D. Gregg, D. and Baker, D. “Trading off inclusion, value, and scale within smallholder value chains”. World Development, 191: 106973.

Arslan, C., Gregg, D. and Stringer, R. 2024. “Hidden income and its impact on expenditure patterns in Uganda”. World Development, 183: 106736.

Arslan, C., Gregg, D. and Wollni, M. 2023. “Paying more to make less: value degrading in the coffee value chain in eastern Uganda”. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, DOI: 10.1111/ajae.12389.

Other rural development

Sayetki, A., Gregg, D. and Stringer, R. 2023. “Some like it hot: household disagreement and productivity in smallholder chilli production in Indonesia”, Bulletin of Indoesian Economic Studies.

Hill, D., McWhinnie, S., Kumar, S. and Gregg, D. 2022. “Technology heterogeneity and poverty traps: A latent class approach to technology gap drivers of chronic poverty”, Journal of Development Studies, 59(2): 224-241.

Hasibuan, M., Gregg, D. and Stringer, R. 2022. “Risk preferences, intrahousehold dynamics and spatial effects on chemical inputs use: Case of small-scale citrus farmers in Indonesia”, Land Use Policy.

Hasibuan, M., Gregg, D. and Stringer, R. 2021. “The role of certification, risk, and time preferences in promoting adoption of climate-resilient citrus varieties in Indonesia”, Climatic Change.

Hasibuan, M., Gregg, D., and Stringer, R. 2020. “Accounting for diverse risk attitudes in measures of risk perceptions: A case study of climate change risk for small-scale citrus farmers in Indonesia.” Land Use Policy. 95.

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An overview of impact from core procurement activities (2025)

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The ‘crowdy three’ – a conceptual model of how supply chains can (should) act as development initi atives (i.e. be ‘ethical’)