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Africa: Agricultural Knowledge
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Jan 22, 2009 (090122)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
"The key message of the report [by the International Assessment of
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development
(IAASTD)] is that small-scale farmers and agro-ecological methods
provide the way forward to avert the current food crisis and meet
the needs of local communities. More equitable trade arrangements
and increased investments in science and technologies and in
sharing knowledge that support agroecologically based approaches in
both small farm and larger scale sectors are urgently required." -
Civil Society Statement, April 2008
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains the Sub-Saharan Africa Summary
from the IAASTD meeting last year in South Africa, as well as a
statement by civil society organizations released at that meeting.
Another AfricaFocus Bulletin sent out today contains several
articles on the food input subsidy program in Malawi and its impact
on policy thinking on the continent, as well as links to several
additional references.
For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on agricultural issues, see
http://www.africafocus.org/agexp.php
For additional background on the IAASTD, see
http://www.agassessment.org,
http://www.agassessment-watch.org, and
http://www.panna.org/jt/agAssessment
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
Civil Society Statement from Johannesburg, South Africa
A new era of agriculture begins today
International agriculture assessment calls for immediate radical
changes
12 April 2008, Johannesburg. Statement from 20 civil society
organizations on the outcome of the "International Assessment of
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development
(IAASTD)"
African Centre for Biosafety (South Africa), AGENDA for Environment
and Responsible Development (Tanzania), Asociación Peruana de
Consumidores y Usuarios (Peru), Consumers International,
Environmental Rights Action (Nigeria), European Centre on
Sustainable Policies for Human and Environmental Rights
(ECOSPHERE), Friends of the Earth International, Greenpeace
International, International Federation of Organic Agriculture
Movements, Organisation Bénoise pour la Promotion de l'Agriculture
Biologique (Benin), Pesticide Action Network Japan, PAN
Philippines, PAN North America, Practical Action (UK), RAPALMIRA
(Colombia), Red de Acción en Agricultura Alternativa (Peru), Third
World Network, Uganda Environmental Education Fund, Vredeseilanden
(Belgium), Women For Sustainable Development (Tunisia)
The report of the International Agriculture Assessment, approved
last week by 57 governments in Johannesburg, is a sobering account
of the failure of industrial farming. It calls for a fundamental
change in the way we do farming, to better address soaring food
prices, hunger, social inequities and environmental disasters.
The report reflects a growing consensus among the global scientific
community and most governments that the old paradigm of industrial,
energy-intensive and toxic agriculture is a concept of the past.
The key message of the report is that small-scale farmers and
agro-ecological methods provide the way forward to avert the
current food crisis and meet the needs of local communities. More
equitable trade arrangements and increased investments in science
and technologies and in sharing knowledge that support
agroecologically based approaches in both small farm and larger
scale sectors are urgently required. For the first time an
independent, global assessment acknowledges that farming has a
diversity of environmental and social functions and that nations
and peoples have the right to democratically determine their best
food and agricultural policies.
The IAASTD process itself was a path-breaking one, in which
governments, major research institutions, industry and civil
society shared equal responsibility in its governance and
implementation. Its success proved that civil society participation
as full partners in intergovernmental processes is critical to
meeting the challenges of the 21st century. The global community's
widespread acceptance of this report is reflected in its approval
by the vast majority of participating governments. Canada,
Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States have as yet not
signed on to the final report. After watering down the formulation
of several key findings during the meeting in Johannesburg, the US
still claimed the assessment was unbalanced. The exact same
allegation came some months earlier from the agrochemical and
biotech industry. However, the report's lack of support for the
further industrialization and globalization of agriculture as well
as for genetically engineered plants in particular, was based on a
rigorous and peer-reviewed analysis of the empirical evidence by
hundreds of scientists and development experts. These experts had
been selected, together with other stakeholders, by the very same
governments and companies that are now calling the assessment
"unbalanced."
The civil society groups that have participated in the IAASTD
process over the past six years may not fully agree with some of
the government-negotiated statements in the report, but they
respect the fact that the central messages accurately reflect the
conclusions of this scientific assessment. We call on all
governments, civil society and international institutions to
support the progressive findings of the IAASTD and jumpstart the
revolution in agricultural policies and practices that is urgently
needed to attain more equitable and sustainable food and farming
systems in the future.
Statements from civil society representatives present in
Johannesburg, 7-12 April 2008
"This report proves one thing: Yes, we can produce more and better
food without destroying rural livelihoods and our natural
resources," Kevin Akoyi, Uganda, for Vredeseilanden (Belgium)
"This marks the beginning of a new, of a real Green Revolution. The
modern way of farming is biodiverse and labour intensive and works
with nature, not against it." Benny Haerlin, Germany, Greenpeace
"This is a wake-up call for governments and international agencies.
The survival of the planet's food systems demands global action to
support agroecological farming and fair and equitable trade."
Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, USA, Pesticide Action Network North America
(PANNA).
"This report clearly shows that small-scale farmers and the
environment lose out under trade liberalization. Developing
countries must exercise their right to stop the flood of cheap,
subsidised products from the North." Lim Li Ching, Malaysia, Third
World Network
"It is heartening to see that the scientists refuted the usual
propaganda on genetically engineered (GE) crops. They focused on
the real problems and saw very little role for GE crops in their
solutions." Juan Lopez, Spain, Friends of the Earth International.
"The scientific evidence gives unequivocal support to organic
agriculture. Organic Agriculture is a credible solution for the
21st century as a sustainable production method social, economic
and environmental sustainability put into practice." Prabha Mahale,
India, International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (
IFOAM)
"The IAASTD provides the evidence to show that locally-controlled,
biologically-based intensification of farming is the only way
forward. In short, it supports food sovereignty." Patrick Mulvany,
UK, Practical Action
"The Green Revolutionaries of the past, with all their expensive
and toxic products, have left a trail of destruction. The IAASTD
essentially says it's time to clean that up and move on." Romeo
Quijano, Philippines, Pesticide Action Network Philippines
Contact Information of Civil Society Participants (available for
interviews)
Kevin Akoyi, (IAASTD CSO Bureau Member from Uganda) Vredeseilanden,
Email: kevinakoyim@yahoo.co.uk
Jaime Delgado, Asociación Peruana de Consumidores y Usuarios
(ASPEC), Peru. Email: aspec@speedy.com.pe, Web www.aspec.org.pe,
Phone. +51-1-222 5000
Luis Gomero (Lead Author, Latin America Regional report Spanish
only) Red de Acción en Agricultura Alternativa, Peru. Email:
lgomero@raaa.org, Tel: (51-1) 425 7955
Benny Haerlin ((IAASTD CSO Bureau Member from Germany) Greenpeace
Intl., Email: haerlin@zs-l.de, Phone: + 49 173 9997555
Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD (Lead Author, Global Report) Pesticide
Action Network North America (in US) Email: mie@panna.org, Office:
+1-415-981-1771, Mobile: +1-510-684-6860
Jamidu Katima, PhD. AGENDA for Environment and Responsible
Development (Tanzania). Email: Jamidu_katima@yahoo.co.uk, Tel: +255
22 2410024 or +255 787 717102
Koa Tasaka (PAN Japan). Email: tasaka@krb.biglobe.ne.jp, T:
+81-42-675-0723
Lim Li Ching (Lead Author, Asia report; note surname Lim) Third
World Network, Email: limliching@myjaring.net, mobile: +60 12
2079744
Juan Lopez, (IAASTD CSO Bureau member from Spain) Friends of the
Earth International, Email: juanlopezvillar@gmail.com, Phone
(Maputo): +258842420298
Prabha Mahale, PhD (IAASTD CSO Bureau member from India) IFOAM,
Email: prabhamahale@vsnl.com , Phone: + 91 124 2560886
Khadouja Mellouli (IAASTD CSO Bureau Member from Tunisia) Women For
Sustainable Development (WFSD), Tunisia. Emails:
ekmellouli@yahoo.com, ngowfsd@yahoo.com; Mobile :+ 216 22 892 595
Patrick Mulvany, Senor Policy Advisor, Practical Action (UK) Email:
patrickmulvany@clara.co.uk, mobile: +44 7949 575711, Web:
practicalaction.org
Elsa Nivia (Lead Author, Latin America Regional report)
Spanish-speaking RAPALMIRA, Colombia, Email:
rapalmira@telesat.com.co, Tel: (57-2) 5525889
Romeo Quijano, MD (IAASTD CSO Bureau member from Philippines) PAN
Philippines, Email: romyquij@yahoo.com, mobile: +63-9-27-602-4947
Erika Rosenthal, LLD (Lead Author, Global & Synthesis Report; Trade
Theme) Email: erosenthal@igc.org, Office: +1-202-742-5846, Mobile
+1-415-812-2055.
Nicholas Senyonjo, Uganda Environmental Education Foundation (UEEF)
Email: ugandaenvironmental@yahoo.com, senyonjonicholas@yahooco.uk,
T: 256-414-289740
Jan Van Aken, Greenpeace International. Email:
jan.vanaken@int.greenpeace.org, Phone: +49 40 306 18-389, Mobile:
+49 151 1805 3415
Davo Vodouhe (Review Editor, SSA report). Organisation Béninoise pour
la Promotion de l'Agriculture Biologique, Benin. Email:
dsvodouhe@yahoo.com, Tel: +22921351497, 22990929418
More information at http://www.agassessment-watch.org and
http://www.panna.org/jt/agAssessment
International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and
Technology for Development (IAASTD)
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)
Summary for Decision Makers
Authors: Carol Markwei (Ghana), Lindela Ndlovu (Zimbabwe),
Elizabeth Robinson (United Kingdom), Wahida Shah (Kenya)
http://www.agassessment.org
Statement by Governments
All countries present at the final intergovernmental plenary
session held in Johannesburg, South Africa in April 2008 welcome
the work of the IAASTD and the uniqueness of this independent
multistakeholder and multidisciplinary process, and the scale of
the challenge of covering a broad range of complex issues. The
Governments present recognize that the Global and sub-Global
Reports are the conclusions of studies by a wide range of
scientific authors, experts and development specialists and while
presenting an overall consensus on the importance of agricultural
knowledge, science and technology for development also provide a
diversity of views on some issues.
All countries see these Reports as a valuable and important
contribution to our understanding on agricultural knowledge,
science and technology for development recognizing the need to
further deepen our understanding of the challenges ahead. This
Assessment is a constructive initiative and important contribution
that all governments need to take forward to ensure that
agricultural knowledge, science and technology fulfills its
potential to meet the development and sustainability goals of the
reduction of hunger and poverty, the improvement of rural
livelihoods and human health, and facilitating equitable, socially,
environmentally and economically sustainable development.
In accordance with the above statement, the following governments
approve the sub-Saharan Africa Summary for Decision Makers:
Benin, Botswana, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia,
Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Senegal,
Swaziland, United Republic of Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia (17
countries)
Background
In August 2002, the World Bank and the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) of the United Nations initiated a global
consultative process to determine whether an international
assessment of agricultural knowledge, science and technology (AKST)
was needed. This was stimulated by discussions at the World Bank
with the private sector and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) on
the state of scientific understanding of biotechnology and more
specifically transgenics. During 2003, eleven consultations were
held, overseen by an international multistakeholder steering
committee and involving over 800 participants from all relevant
stakeholder groups, e.g., governments, the private sector and civil
society.
Based on these consultations the steering committee recommended to
an Intergovernmental Plenary meeting in Nairobi, Kenya in September
2004 that an international assessment of the role of agricultural
knowledge, science and technology (AKST) in reducing hunger and
poverty, improving rural livelihoods and facilitating
environmentally, socially and economically sustainable development
was needed. The concept of an International Assessment of
Agricultural Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) was
endorsed as a multi-thematic, multi-spatial, multi-temporal
intergovernmental process with a multistakeholder Bureau
cosponsored by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United
Nations (FAO), the Global Environment Facility (GEF), United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the World Bank and World Health
Organization (WHO).
The IAASTD's governance structure is a unique hybrid of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the
nongovernmental Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA). The
stakeholder composition of the Bureau was agreed at the
Intergovernmental Plenary meeting in Nairobi; it is geographically
balanced and multistakeholder with 30 government and 30 civil
society representatives (NGOs, producer and consumer groups,
private sector entities and international organizations) in order
to ensure ownership of the process and findings by a range of
stakeholders.
About 400 of the world's experts were selected by the Bureau,
following nominations by stakeholder groups, to prepare the IAASTD
Report (comprised of a Global and 5 sub-Global assessments). These
experts worked in their own capacity and did not represent any
particular stakeholder group. Additional individuals, organizations
and governments were involved in the peer review process.
The IAASTD development and sustainability goals were endorsed at
the first Intergovernmental Plenary and are consistent with a
subset of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): the reduction
of hunger and poverty, the improvement of rural livelihoods and
human health, and facilitating equitable, socially, environmentally
and economically sustainable development. Realizing these goals
requires acknowledging the multifunctionality of agriculture: the
challenge is to simultaneously meet development and sustainability
goals while increasing agricultural production.
Meeting these goals has to be placed in the context of a rapidly
changing world of urbanization, growing inequities, human
migration, globalization, changing dietary preferences, climate
change, environmental degradation, a trend toward biofuels and an
increasing population. These conditions are affecting local and
global food security and putting pressure on productive capacity
and ecosystems. Hence there are unprecedented challenges ahead in
providing food within a global trading system where there are other
competing uses of agricultural and other natural resources. AKST
alone cannot solve these problems, which are caused by complex
political and social dynamics; but it can make a major contribution
to meeting development and sustainability goals. Never before has
it been more important for the world to generate and use AKST.
Given the focus on hunger, poverty and livelihoods, the IAASTD pays
special attention to the current situation, issues and potential
opportunities to redirect the current AKST system to improve the
situation for poor rural people, especially small-scale farmers,
rural laborers and others with limited resources. It addresses
issues critical to formulating policy and provides information for
decision makers confronting conflicting views on contentious issues
such as the environmental consequences of productivity increases,
environmental and human health impacts of transgenic crops, the
consequences of bioenergy development on the environment and on the
long-term availability and price of food, and the implications of
climate change on agricultural production. The Bureau agreed that
the scope of the assessment needed to go beyond the narrow confines
of S&T and should encompass other types of relevant knowledge
(e.g., knowledge held by agricultural producers, consumers and end
users) and that it should also assess the role of institutions,
organizations, governance, markets and trade.
The IAASTD is a multidisciplinary and multistakeholder enterprise
requiring the use and integration of information, tools and models
from different knowledge paradigms including local and traditional
knowledge. The IAASTD does not advocate specific policies or
practices; it assesses the major issues facing AKST and points
towards a range of AKST options for action that meet development
and sustainability goals. It is policy relevant, but not policy
prescriptive. It integrates scientific information on a range of
topics that are critically interlinked, but often addressed
independently, i.e., agriculture, poverty, hunger, human health,
natural resources, environment, development and innovation. It will
enable decision makers to bring a richer base of knowledge to bear
on policy and management decisions on issues previously viewed in
isolation. Knowledge gained from historical analysis (typically the
past 50 years) and an analysis of some future development
alternatives to 2050 form the basis for assessing options for
action on science and technology, capacity development,
institutions and policies, and investments.
The IAASTD is conducted according to an open, transparent,
representative and legitimate process; is evidence-based; presents
options rather than recommendations; assesses different local,
regional and global perspectives; presents different views,
acknowledging that there can be more than one interpretation of the
same evidence based on different world views; and identifies the
key scientific uncertainties and areas on which research could be
focused to advance development and sustainability goals.
The IAASTD is composed of a Global assessment and five sub-Global
assessments: Central and West Asia and North Africa - CWANA; East
and South Asia and the Pacific - ESAP; Latin America and the
Caribbean - LAC; North America and Europe - NAE; sub-Saharan Africa
SSA. It (i) assesses the generation, access, dissemination and use
of public and private sector AKST in relation to the goals, using
local, traditional and formal knowledge; (ii) analyzes existing and
emerging technologies, practices, policies and institutions and
their impact on the goals; (iii) provides information for decision
makers in different civil society, private and public organizations
on options for improving policies, practices, institutional and
organizational arrangements to enable AKST to meet the goals; (iv)
brings together a range of stakeholders (consumers, governments,
international agencies and research organizations, NGOs, private
sector, producers, the scientific community) involved in the
agricultural sector and rural development to share their
experiences, views, understanding and vision for the future; and
(v) identifies options for future public and private investments in
AKST. In addition, the IAASTD will enhance local and regional
capacity to design, implement and utilize similar assessments.
In this assessment agriculture is used in the widest sense to
include production of food, feed, fuel, fiber and other products
and to include all sectors from production of inputs (e.g., seeds
and fertilizer) to consumption of products. However, as in all
assessments, some topics were covered less extensively than others
(e.g., livestock, forestry, fisheries and agricultural
engineering), largely due to the expertise of the selected authors.
The IAASTD draft Report was subjected to two rounds of peer review
by governments, organizations and individuals. These drafts were
placed on an open access web site and open to comments by anyone.
The authors revised the drafts based on numerous peer review
comments, with the assistance of review editors who were
responsible for ensuring the comments were appropriately taken into
account. One of the most difficult issues authors had to address
was criticisms that the report was too negative. In a scientific
review based on empirical evidence, this is always a difficult
comment to handle, as criteria are needed in order to say whether
something is negative or positive. Another difficulty was
responding to the conflicting views expressed by reviewers. The
difference in views was not surprising given the range of
stakeholder interests and perspectives. Thus one of the key
findings of the IAASTD is that there are diverse and conflicting
interpretations of past and current events, which need to be
acknowledged and respected.
The Global and sub-Global Summaries for Decision Makers and the
Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report were approved at an
Intergovernmental Plenary in Johannesburg, South Africa in April
2008. The Synthesis Report integrates the key findings from the
Global and sub-Global assessments, and focuses on eight
Bureau-approved topics: bioenergy; biotechnology; climate change;
human health; natural resource management; traditional knowledge
and community based innovation; trade and markets; and women in
agriculture.
The IAASTD builds on and adds value to a number of recent
assessments and reports that have provided valuable information
relevant to the agricultural sector, but have not specifically
focused on the future role of AKST, the institutional dimensions
and the multifunctionality of agriculture. These include: FAO State
of Food Insecurity in the World (yearly); InterAcademy Council
Report: Realizing the Promise and Potential of African Agriculture
(2004); UN Millennium Project Task Force on Hunger (2005);
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005); CGIAR Science Council
Strategy and Priority Setting Exercise (2006); Comprehensive
Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture: Guiding Policy
Investments in Water, Food, Livelihoods and Environment (2007);
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Reports (2001 and 2007);
UNEP Fourth Global Environmental Outlook (2007); World Bank World
Development Report: Agriculture for Development (2007); IFPRI
Global Hunger Indices (yearly); and World Bank Internal Report of
Investments in SSA (2007).
Financial support was provided to the IAASTD by the cosponsoring
agencies, the governments of Australia, Canada, Finland, France,
Ireland, Sweden, Switzerland, US and UK, the European Commission,
and CropLife International. In addition, many organizations have
provided in-kind support. The authors and review editors have given
freely of their time, largely without compensation.
The Global and sub-Global Summaries for Decision Makers and the
Synthesis Report are written for a range of stakeholders, i.e.,
government policy makers, private sector, NGOs, producer and
consumer groups, international organizations and the scientific
community. There are no recommendations, only options for action.
The options for action are not prioritized because different
options are actionable by different stakeholders, each of whom have
a different set of priorities and responsibilities and operate in
different socio-economic-political circumstances.
IAASTD Sub-Saharan Africa Report
Summary for Decision Makers
Agriculture, which incorporates crops, forests, fisheries,
livestock and agroforestry, accounts for an average of 32% of the
region's GDP, and is woven into the fabric of most societies and
cultures in the region. Even though the population is growing and
rapidly urbanizing, most families will continue to have ties to
land and water.
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology (AKST) has had some
notable successes in SSA including the widespread adoption of
improved crop and tree varieties and livestock breeds; the
development of pest-resistant and drought-tolerant varieties;
biocontrol of pests and parasites such as cassava, mealybug, green
mite and ticks; integrated natural resource management; development
of biodiversity products; and methods and tools for improved
productivity and management in water availability, crops,
livestock, fodder, trees and fisheries. Yet in SSA, unlike in other
regions, overall per capita agricultural yields declined from 1970
to 1980 and since then have stagnated. The number of poor people is
increasing, 30% of the population lives with chronic hunger, and
similar levels of malnutrition in children under the age of five
persist.
Increasing agricultural productivity remains a priority for SSA,
given the very low yields in the region and widespread hunger,
poverty, and malnutrition. However, the development and
sustainability goals of reducing hunger, achieving food security,
improving health and nutrition, and increasing environmental and
social sustainability will only be reached if the focus of
agriculture and AKST moves away from simply the production of food,
fiber, feed, and bioenergy.
A broader perspective encompasses an integrated agricultural
commodity value chain from production through to processing and
marketing with a local and regional perspective. It accounts for
the multiple functions of agriculture that include the improvement
of livelihoods, the enhancement of environmental services, the
conservation of natural resources and biodiversity, and the
contribution of agriculture to the maintenance of social and
cultural traditions. It recognizes that women, who account for
approximately 70% of agricultural workers and 80% of food
processors in SSA, need significantly increased representation in
research, extension and policy making, and equitable access to
education, credit and secure land tenure. It also recognizes the
need for higher quality education, research and extension that
addresses the development and sustainability goals.
Challenges and Options
Current low levels of agricultural productivity in SSA prevent much
of the population from escaping poverty, hunger and malnutrition.
On average, livestock and crop yields in SSA are lower than all
other regions, though these averages mask considerable variation.
Cereal yields, for example, cereal yields range from 185 kg ha-1 in
Botswana to 2,100 kg ha-1 in Cameroon. Low yields have been
difficult to overcome because they are the result of a wide range
of agronomic, environmental, institutional, social and economic
factors.
Low input use, including total fertilizer input of less than 10 kg
ha-1 on average, contributes to SSA's low crop yields. Although
there is considerable variation across farming systems and
countries, in the mid-1990s every country in SSA was estimated to
have a negative soil nutrient balance for nitrogen, potassium and
phosphorus. Increased fertilizer use is seen by most practitioners
as essential, reflected in the resolution by African Union members
to reduce costs through national and regional level procurement,
harmonization of taxes and regulations, the elimination of taxes
and tariffs, and improving access to fertilizer, output market
incentives, and credit from input suppliers. The cost of
fertilization can also be reduced directly through fertilizer
subsidies. These are currently being implemented in some SSA
countries to support farmers. The cost of fertilization can also be
reduced through the intensified use of organic fertilizer.
Agrochemicals, especially some synthetic fertilizers and
pesticides, have caused negative effects on human and animal health
and the environment in some parts of SSA; this has been exacerbated
by unsafe application processes and inadequate access to
information concerning handling and disposal practices. Pollution,
particularly with respect to water bodies, may also result from
inappropriate use. The economic, environmental and health costs
associated with greater use of agrochemicals suggest that AKST
options involve reorienting research away from high-input blanket
doses towards technologies that enable technically efficient
applications specific to local soil conditions [Ch 5] and towards
integrated nutrient management approaches.
More than four fifths of agricultural land is affected by soil
moisture stress that limits the uptake of nutrients, implying the
need to conserve both water and soil organic matter in parallel [Ch
5]. Current efforts to improve soil fertility and regenerate the
land include research into integrated soil fertility management
that builds on farmer practices such as improved natural fallows,
rotations, mixed livestock-cropping systems [Ch 3] and
incorporation of green and livestock manures where available. The
adoption of animal manure is limited by transport costs, the
quantity needed per unit area of land and labor costs of weeding.
Green manures help to revive degraded land, but often compete with
edible and cash crops, and the benefits are often unnoticed in the
short run. These are the types of tradeoffs that AKST needs to
evaluate and minimize with farmers. Organic, agroforestry and noor
low-till farming offer integrated agroecological approaches to
reducing soil degradation, but further studies are required to
determine the conditions and incentives required for farmers to
adopt these methods.
Increases in the exploitation of both surface and groundwater are
required for SSA to increase productivity. Agricultural production
in SSA is predominantly rainfed. Only 4% of agricultural land is
irrigated compared to 37% in Asia and 15% in Latin America. This
situation is exacerbated by high rainfall variability and
uncertainty, especially in arid and semiarid areas [Ch 3], and
projected rising temperatures in SSA and decreased precipitation in
the Sahel and southern Africa as a consequence of climate change.
The characteristics of agriculture in SSA suggest that
smaller-scale irrigation, greenwater technologies such as water
conservation, rainwater harvesting and community level water
management need to be explored as alternatives to large-scale
irrigation projects. Increases in the level of irrigation can come
from both surface and ground water, drawing lessons from within and
outside the region on viable small to medium scale irrigation
techniques that require limited infrastructural development and can
reach many farmers. Methods such as pumping from the rivers on an
individual and small group basis, and locally manufactured drip
systems are still to be fully exploited [Ch 5].
Efficient and equitable water allocation, a component of AKST,
requires a better understanding of the value of water for different
competing users, appropriate mechanisms for allocating water, (e.g.
pricing, allocation of property rights, regulation) and
negotiations that create incentives for farmers to adopt
water-efficient technologies [Ch 5]. The appropriate approach will
require integrated research that builds on local knowledge,
existing technologies, existing water institutions and the ability
to enforce rights through formal systems, and also on complementary
institutions such as land rights and farmers' access to credit.
Poor households may simply not be able to afford water priced at
its true cost, in which case approaches such as that taken in South
Africa (households get a free allocation per month) need to be
explored.
Increasing the performance of agriculture requires an improvement
in productivity on the 80% of SSA farms that are smaller than two
hectares. Earlier paradigms that typically attempted to fit farmers
into the existing linear top-down structures of
research-development-extension worked relatively well for major
cash crops, but there has been less success on small-scale
diversified farms [Ch 5]. Options for AKST include integrated and
participatory approaches that can increase the likelihood that
appropriate technologies for production are developed and adopted
by small-scale farmers. Alternative approaches include moving
farmer engagement closer to priority setting and funding decisions,
increasing collaboration with social scientists, and increasing
participatory and interdisciplinary work in the core research
institutions. There is evidence from East Africa that innovative
approaches to AKST development such as farmer research groups are
more successful in reaching women farmers than traditional
extension activities. By understanding farmers' contexts and
priorities, grounding new technologies in an understanding of
farmers' motivations and constraints, and explicitly including
groups that are often socially excluded such as women and
minorities, AKST is more likely to be relevant and adopted.
Many farmers in SSA use indigenous animal breeds which are able to
withstand harsh conditions and tolerate many diseases, but their
meat, milk and egg productivity is low. Options for AKST to improve
livestock productivity include the use of open nucleus breeding
schemes and improving the genetic potential of indigenous breeds,
e.g. through characterizing genetic diversity in order to provide
insights into genetic relationships. Given that animal disease
management is one of the key explanations for movements, herd size
and growth, AKST has a role to play in addressing the impact of
disease at the smallholder level.
Scaling-up integrated approaches is difficult because successful
innovations tend to incorporate local knowledge and to be specific
to the particular agro-climatic conditions. Public good aspects of
baskets of prototype technologies, whether originating from
farmers, researchers or collaborative efforts, that match the
diversity of farmers' fields can be transferred with appropriate
scaling up and dissemination strategies. Where current structures
are ineffective, new institutional and organizational arrangements
may be required to support the empowerment of local communities to
develop, adapt and disseminate AKST. Despite the increasing use of
participatory and integrated approaches to AKST development,
institutional resources still tend to be compartmentalized. For
example, water management is often undertaken independently of
pest, soil, livestock and forest management. Reduced water
availability is the main cause of loss of productivity in more than
half of the grazing land. Improved water management would improve
livestock health through quantity and quality of grazing resources
and reduced walking distance to watering points.
Knowledge, understanding and uptake of new agricultural
technologies on the whole are poor and patchy in SSA. In the IAASTD
assessment, biotechnology is defined according to that in the
Convention on Biological Diversity. In this context it includes
much of the traditional knowledge and many of the traditional
technologies used in SSA for the production, processing and
preservation of food plus modern molecular tools such as genetic
engineering, marker assisted selections or breeding and genomic
techniques. In this broader sense biotechnology, as an AKST subset,
has a role to play in addressing development and sustainability
goals but it needs to be managed to avoid derivative problems from
its use [Ch 3].
Genetic engineering is considered by some to have important
ramifications for productivity but some of its uses and impacts are
hotly contested. Contamination of farmer-saved seed and threats to
biodiversity in centers of origin are key concerns with respect to
biotechnology and genetic engineering in particular. The
environmental risks and evidence of negative health impacts mean
that SSA's ability to make informed decisions regarding
biotechnology research, development, delivery and application is
critical. In part, the current limited capacity of individual
countries to address risk assessment and management of transgenics
is being addressed through regional capacity building and
harmonization of guidelines, policies, legislation and creating an
understanding of biosafety issues. However, individual countries
could develop and advance their own biotechnology capacities. The
development of comprehensive national biosafety frameworks works in
conjunction with effective enforcement institutions and
implementation mechanisms [Ch 3].
Biological control is an option for integrated pest management and
involves augmentation or conservation of local or introduced
natural enemies to pest populations. There are several examples
where staple and important crops have been saved by biological
control over wide areas. There are a number of economic assessments
showing biocontrol's successes including coffee mealybug and more
recently the campaigns against cassava mealybug, green mite and
water hyacinth that show large and accruing gains. These controls
are still in place and contribute to small farmers' food security
in the long term [Ch 2].
SSA countries are the most intense users of biomass in the world,
meeting more than 50% of their total primary energy consumption
from this source. This biomass energy predominantly consists of
unrefined traditional fuel such as firewood and crop and animal
residues [Ch 2]. Use of biomass as a source of energy in its
traditional forms results in inefficient energy conversion,
environmental and health hazards, is time-consuming in terms of
collection and contributes to the degradation of forests. AKST has
played a role in improving the traditional bioenergy technologies,
such as design and supply of efficient cooking stoves, and helping
people to move to more sustainable, efficient and less harmful
forms of energy. Some SSA countries have realized this potential
and have programs for the cogeneration of electricity. [Ch 2]
Research and development in improving biofuel yields per unit of
land and in reducing economic costs of production are needed.
Biofuel production involves tradeoffs that have not yet been
evaluated. Globally, output from first generation biofuels produced
from agricultural crops is growing rapidly supported by government
policies, but these fuels are rarely economically competitive with
petroleum fuels. The production of first generation biofuels in
particular in SSA is likely to put pressure on forests and marginal
lands. A major debate centers around whether this use of biomass
will remove land from production of food crops and/or result in
increased prices of staple commodities, such as maize, if used for
biofuels. Next generation biofuels may have greater potential for
SSA. Many use residues, stems and leaves and so could reduce
pressure on land requirements, but concerns remain, e.g. over the
environmental impact of harvesting agricultural residues. AKST has
a large role to play concerning the careful analysis of biofuel
technology appropriate for SSA, in parallel with the development of
policies and capacity building to reduce the negative effects of
growing biofuels and determine the health, environmental, energy
and food security tradeoffs in the region. Increased research will
also enable SSA countries to determine their appropriate entry
points.
Rapid depletion of SSA's natural resources and the genetic erosion
of indigenous germplasm threaten the sustainability of agriculture
in SSA. Land use change, including deforestation and expansion of
agriculture into marginal areas, results in nutrient and
biodiversity losses, water and soil degradation, loss of pasture,
adversely affects ground and surface water availability and reduces
the resilience of agricultural systems, especially in semiarid
regions. These issues affect every aspect of AKST as environmental
degradation affects the productivity and sustainability of
agriculture. Over-exploitation of freshwater and oceanic fisheries,
controlled breeding and the development of livestock, crop and tree
breeds with a narrow genetic base further threaten the resource
base [Ch 5].
Integrated natural resource management options include diversifying
farming systems, enhancing natural capital and building on local
and traditional knowledge. For instance, significant investments
have been made in the development of high value products from
indigenous plant species for the pharmaceutical, neutraceutical and
cosmetic industries. Such localization approaches place agriculture
squarely in the context of society and ecosystems and so can
empower local communities to address depletion of natural resources
and loss of biodiversity, in conjunction with poverty and food
security. Integrated approaches allow the generation of substantive
knowledge concerning the tradeoffs among economic, social, cultural
and ecological goals, the roles of various actors such as
producers, the private sector, civil society and government, and
can accommodate new challenges such as changes caused by climate
change, including the increased problem of invasive species. These
sets of activities and interventions will not reach system level
goals without an explicit analysis of who wins and who loses and
how the potential tradeoffs and synergies will be managed.
Strategies of rapid agricultural development need to be coordinated
more directly with strategies for biodiversity and water
conservation such as retaining areas of natural vegetation in
production areas, keeping areas where pollinators can thrive,
promoting organic agriculture and incorporating trees in
agricultural landscapes.
The public good nature of many natural resources lends itself to
consultative and collective approaches in the development of
policies and institutions. Involving local communities in
determining land use and land tenure policies and giving them
control and responsibility over the resources increases the
likelihood of efficient, equitable and sustainable use of common
pool natural resources and compliance with rules and regulations.
Examples include participatory forest management, which is being
introduced in a number of countries in SSA [Ch 5]. The collective,
public goods aspect of on-farm agricultural biodiversity can be
supported through international mechanisms such as Farmers' Rights'
provisions under the FAO International Treaty on Plant Genetic
Resources for Food and Agriculture.
Farmers in SSA often integrate trees on their farms and on
landscapes in order to harness multiple benefits, including timber
and other high value products, fuel wood, fiber, feed, medicinal
products, fruits and ecosystem services, such as land
rehabilitation and soil fertility through sequential fallow systems
and systems with intercropped trees [Ch 5]. Barriers to clonal
forestry and agroforestry have been overcome by the development of
robust vegetative propagation techniques, which are applicable to
a wide range of tree species. Domestication, intensive selection
and conventional breeding have had positive impacts on yield and
the production of staple food crops, horticultural crops and timber
trees. Agroforestry research builds on local knowledge and has the
potential to reduce pressure on forests and provide ecosystem
services such as biodiversity conservation, carbon sequestration
and land restoration. Women and men have different priorities,
which suggests scope for AKST to identify trees with multiple uses.
Factors that need to be taken into account in agroforestry research
include impact assessments, e.g., ensuring that trees do not
jeopardize water supplies, especially in dry areas, and that exotic
species are not introduced that cause social equity issues relating
to land use and land rights. Other issues that need to be addressed
include increasing adoption of agroforestry technologies, pests and
diseases, markets for agroforestry products, availability of
planting materials and adaptation to climate change [Ch 3].
Because livestock genetic diversity is being lost relatively
rapidly, short-term strategies are required to provide information
for priority setting. This might include as a first step, rapid
surveys and population estimates and data on genetic distances. In
the longer term, policies and market strategies to promote the use
of indigenous breeds can provide economic incentives to conserve
these breeds. Community participation in livestock breeding
increases the likelihood of appropriate traits being identified and
developed. Yet information is still required with respect to how
livestock owners make livestock selections and how livestock
production fits with other livelihood activities.
SSA is the only region where per capita fish supplies are falling
(from 9 kg per person in 1973 to 6.6 kg in 2005) as a result of
stagnation in capture fish production and a growing population.
Where capture fisheries are over-exploited, institutions need to be
strengthened for allocating fishing rights, ensuring sustainable
catches, and enforcing rules and regulations. Improved management
of capture fisheries will also require strategies to reduce and use
by-catch, and reduce postharvest losses [Ch 5]. Working with local
fishing communities and understanding their perspectives on
externally enforced rules and regulations may reduce tensions
between biological realities and community acceptance. Investment
in supporting local fishers in modern fishing techniques could also
go a long way in reducing tensions and improving livelihoods.
Unlike in other regions, aquaculture currently makes a very small
contribution to total fish production in SSA just 2% compared
with 38% worldwide. Aquaculture has the potential to improve
livelihoods and nutrition, and reduce the pressure on capture
fisheries. AKST has a role to play in reducing the potential
negative effects of aquaculture through learning from other
regions, increased research into integrated farming systems that
avoid using wild-caught fish as feed, and strengthening the
capacity for impact monitoring, such as the impacts of chemical
inputs and the conversion of mangroves to fisheries. Additional
options for AKST include the need to develop post-harvest
technologies, value chain and product development, farmer training
and increasing access to inputs [Ch 5].
Agricultural intensification tends to be accompanied by decreasing
agricultural biodiversity. However, farmers naturally play a role
in conserving agricultural biodiversity that can be exploited and
incorporated into more formal conservation approaches. Genetic
erosion is of particular concern in SSA because many countries have
a wide range of crops and livestock species that are considered
relatively unimportant on a global level but are important as local
staples. In situ conservation and protection is particularly
important for conserving genetic resources, helping to maintain
evolutionary processes and having a positive effect on biodiversity
and equity.
Working with local communities has been shown to be key to
conserving biodiversity and maintaining or enhancing ecosystem
services in the long term. Market-oriented incentives enable local
communities to benefit financially from sustainably managing soils,
water, sequestering carbon and conserving biodiversity. These could
include direct payments to farmers or to particular agricultural
sectors; other types of rewards include well-defined property
rights over natural resources in favor of local communities; the
development of markets for indigenous species; and strengthening
intellectual property rights.
Agriculture, health and nutrition in SSA are closely linked. The
emphasis of agricultural policies in SSA on the production of a few
staple food crops to the neglect of indigenous species with good
nutritional properties, and micronutrient rich foods, such as
fruits and vegetables, has reduced agriculture's potential to
improve the livelihoods of households, including health and
nutrition.
Increasing yields will have a direct impact on the nutritional
status of the rural poor. General options to reduce malnutrition
encompass increasing households' access to income and calories and
encouraging a diet of diversified foods with the needed nutrients.
There is scope for AKST to target micronutrient deficiency through
increased research into the nutritional value of local and
traditional foods, particularly fruits and vegetables, and the
extent to which they contribute to diets. To ensure that the
direction of AKST research is relevant to local communities and
that its outputs will be widely adopted, additional research is
required into the conditions under which farmers will choose to
cultivate and market these traditional food sources and households
will choose to consume and purchase. The empowerment and increased
involvement of women can help with the development, adoption and
demand for more nutritious foods, such as orange-flesh sweet potato
(Ipomoea batatas). Malnutrition is increasingly becoming an urban
as well as rural problem. Options that are particularly relevant to
the urban population include product development to increase the
variety and quality of food, including fortified foods, and
targeted information campaigns to increase awareness and encourage
adoption of more nutritious foods.
Malnutrition and ill health in SSA are exacerbated by tropical
diseases, such as malaria and schistosomiasis, and by
HIV/AIDS-associated diseases, such as tuberculosis, that result in
reduced workforces available to agriculture and other productive
sectors [Ch 5]. Animal-linked diseases affecting both human and
animals have also been a significant setback to livelihood
security, aggravated by unregulated cross-border movements
resulting in the spread of transboundary diseases such as
Contagious Bovine Pleuropneumonia (CBPP), African Swine Fever (ASF)
and Rift Valley Fever (RVF). AKST options to address these diseases
include efficient vaccine development, rapid and accurate
diagnostic techniques and breeding of animals with high tolerance
to diseases. Policy options include control of animal movements
across boundaries and this requires regional cooperation.
Most farmers in SSA operate in an environment of high risk and
uncertainty. Farmers therefore tend to adopt strategies that
minimize risk and vulnerability at the expense of profit-maximizing
strategies, resulting in an agricultural sector in SSA that is well
below its potential. SSA already experiences high variability in
rainfall and other climatic extremes, which will be exacerbated by
climate change. Resilience in much of SSA is inhibited by fragile
ecosystems, weak institutions, ineffective governance, and poverty;
those most vulnerable are the poor who have the least adaptive
capacity. When AKST builds on farmers' and pastoralists' coping
strategies and innovations thereby placing local people's knowledge
and actions, such as diversified production practices used by 90%
of SSA farmers, at the center of research efforts, the multiple
functions of agriculture are better realized and the threats of
climate change mitigated. Options include undertaking collaborative
research with farmers, including the integration of crop,
livestock, tree and fish components where applicable that spread
risk and deliver various benefits at different periods throughout
the year [Ch 3].
Few households in SSA have private and transferable property rights
to the land that they farm. Although secure land tenure correlates
with long-term investments in natural resource management, land
titling in itself has not been shown to increase credit
transactions, improve production or increase the number of land
sales. Any benefits are often offset by the high transactions costs
of titling land and loss of rights of disadvantaged groups
including women and pastoralists. However, land tenure reform in
some cases may be necessary to secure individual or collective
rights to resources in order to reduce farmers' vulnerability and
strengthen women's access to resources. It is more likely to be
effective and equitable if it is sensitive to the impact on the
rights of disadvantaged groups and undertaken in parallel with the
harmonization of other laws such as inheritance [Ch 5]. Collective
action when resource and land tenure are secure has yielded
benefits and reduced risks and costs for members through labor
efficiencies, provision of public services and management of
natural resources. The inclusion of a gender perspective in these
institutions for collective action leads to more equitable
outcomes.
Credit, insurance, and other risk-sharing institutions can reduce
farmer exposure to risk and uncertainty and therefore enable them
to increase expected output and profits. Microcredit is relatively
well established in SSA. Much is provided through NGOs and not all
may be economically sustainable without the injection of external
funds to cover the relatively high administrative costs [Ch 5].
Recently retail banks are becoming involved in commercially viable
microcredit by providing capital to organizations that then provide
the microcredit directly to farmers. An appropriate policy
environment for easy access to affordable microcredit is most
likely to benefit farmers. Alternatives to credit from the
financial sector include the development of contracts that allow
for advanced payment and provision of inputs and extension services
from agribusiness companies to farmers, such as contract farming
and outgrower schemes.
Weather insurance can reduce farmers' exposure to highly variable
rainfall and hence crop yields provided they are in a position to
pay for such services [Ch 5]. Private provision of weather and crop
insurance is only likely to occur for larger farms and high value
crops. Some initiatives are being piloted by the World Bank that
pay out depending on rainfall rather than crop output, thereby
eliminating moral hazard (farmers may put less effort into their
farming activities if they are insured against losses). Such
insurance may be more relevant to drought rather than climate
variability and the problem of covariance remains (if one farmer is
negatively affected the likelihood is that most farmers in the
vicinity will be), suggesting that private companies on their own
may not be willing to provide such insurance. Micro-insurance is
already being introduced for small-scale farmers in a number of SSA
countries through partnerships between private companies, donor
governments, and NGOs, but has not been rigorously evaluated.
Rangeland management approaches practiced by pastoral livestock
farmers have been recognized as the appropriate response to
knowledge of the spatial and temporal availability of resources.
These strategies include movement of livestock to follow quality
and quantity of feed and water, flexible stocking rates and herd
diversification sustained by a system of communal resource tenure.
AKST needs to address emerging constraints and new realities for
these pastoral systems brought about by land tenure changes, which
conflict with traditional tenure, institutions, and carrying
capacity in the context of emerging challenges such as climate
change and associated stresses. These strategies are most likely to
work if countries develop regional strategies to enhance the
evolution of pastoral farming systems.
Options for AKST include the application of geographic
information systems and quantitative modeling processes to provide
further insights into productivity patterns of the system and offer
policy options to ensure sustainability. Incentives and
arrangements for local communities that designate rangelands for
other uses such as biodiversity conservation have been attempted in
some countries. The development of reliable early warning systems
to avoid catastrophic effects of droughts and designing livestock
management systems can help to alleviate the shortage of dry season
grazing. Improving understanding and documentation of the role of
livestock in livelihoods and motivations behind pastoralist
practices will be most effective if conducted in pastoralists'
languages using participatory methods.
The lack of connection between SSA farmers and the market has seen
agriculture remain rudimentary, unprofitable and unresponsive to
market demand. Farmers' poor access to markets reduces incentives
to apply AKST innovations and to make investments in modern
technologies and so inhibits the shift of poor farmers from
subsistence to market-oriented production. Weak markets result in
expensive inputs and poorly developed output markets result in low
farm-gate prices for internationally traded products. Weak business
service sectors reinforce small producers' isolation from any but
the most local markets and barriers to entering the formal market
reinforce the inefficiencies and limitations inherent in the
informal sector, with the result that the benefits of informality
are outweighed by reduced competitiveness and increased
vulnerability. SSA farmers have fared no better internationally.
Between 1980 and 2000, most SSA countries' agricultural exports to
international markets stagnated at just 2% of the global market in
spite of globalization trends that were expected to open new
markets to SSA products. It is critical that terms of trade between
SSA and international partners improve.
Options to improve the connection between farmers and the market
include improving technical assistance in production and
postharvesting techniques; training and capacity development and
access to credit for long-term investments and product upgrading;
investment in organizational and institutional development of
farmer organizations to enhance farmers' management, negotiating,
and bargaining skills; and promotion of agro-processing in small
urban centers. AKST has an important role to play in increasing
production efficiency along the value chain by making modern
technologies available and providing viable processes for
transmitting marketing information and including information
related to consumer preferences and price signals to farmers and
agro-processors. Contract farming and outgrower schemes, which
offer benefits related to guaranteed market access, access to
credit and market information are being explored in the region.
The absence of processing and storage infrastructure located near
the main producing areas inhibits value addition. Further, market
development calls for infrastructure inputs, including rural road
networks and electricity. There is a positive correlation between
the development of transportation infrastructure and agricultural
intensification; yet SSA has the lowest density of paved roads of
any world region. Information and communication technologies (ICTs)
development is increasing access to and contribution of AKST
knowledge in some parts of the region, but there is potential to
achieve more impact.
Increasing the scope of marketing opportunities at the regional
level, as stipulated in the Lagos Plan of Action and the Abuja
Treaty, will increase trade and marketing opportunities. Further
options include implementing existing regional agreements towards
meeting targets; improving and harmonizing customs procedures and
instituting policies for more efficient cross-border trade; and
removing infrastructural and other barriers to the movement of
commodities across borders.
Payments for environmental services (PES) are a market-based tool
that has received substantial interest in SSA. It creates
incentives for managing natural resources, directly rewarding
management practices that contribute to maintaining and enhancing
environmental services that result in biodiversity conservation,
carbon sequestration, water quality and availability, and land
rehabilitation and nutrient cycling [Ch 5]. There has been some
recent experience in SSA where those that provide an environmental
service are compensated for this by the beneficiaries of the
service.
There is also increasing potential for African countries and
small-scale farmers to be involved in voluntary markets for carbon
and international market mechanisms such as the CDM (Clean
Development Mechanism). Knowledge and strategies to reduce carbon
emissions through community based afforestation and reforestation
projects, agroforestry and reduced deforestation and degradation
(REDD) are being generated, but need to be tested and adopted.
These strategies have the potential to create synergies for
increasing productivity and achieving the multiple functions of
agriculture [Ch 5].
Other mechanisms such as certification, which may result in a
premium paid to farmers, have to be carefully designed so that
appropriate prices are set and the requirements for certified
products are jointly negotiated. However, at present the costs of
certification for small-scale farmers can be prohibitive [Ch 5].
AKST has a role to play in assessing and monitoring the impacts of
these different, novel market approaches decreasing transactions
costs for local communities, and setting up appropriate policies
and institutions that provide level playing fields for negotiation
between buyers and sellers and determine whether the poor can
benefit.
The dominance of external funding for AKST in SSA has resulted in
unreliable long-term funding and loss of control over the relevance
and direction of new AKST developments.
Even with external funding, if Nigeria and South Africa are
excluded, AKST spending in SSA declined by 2.5% per year during the
1990s. A commitment by countries in SSA to reaching the Maputo
Declaration's target of allocating 10% of the budget to agriculture
has the potential in some cases to ensure more sustained and
reliable public funding for AKST, increase the relevance of AKST
for SSA, and be a catalyst for increased coherence between donor
and national policies. In parallel, better use can be made of
current limited resources through existing regional and
sub-regional networks enabling resource and expertise sharing;
leveraging funding through cost-sharing with end users; the use of
competitive grants, matching grants, trust funds, and specific
surcharges such as levies and voluntary contributions. Furthermore,
a strategic action at the national level on stimulating local
private sector investment in food and agriculture and local
agri-business could help.
Establishing funding mechanisms through performance based
competitive research funds and matching grants can enhance
collaboration between various research partners. Public-private
partnerships offer a way to leverage public funding, but AKST
research and development may be pulled towards commercial outputs
at the expense of public good outputs and so still need to be
evaluated against development and sustainability goals. Given the
contribution of agriculture to improving human health and
nutrition, a strategy of integrated planning and programming among
ministries of health, agriculture, livestock and fisheries would
provide opportunities for joint funding of, and better synergies
among programs. More generally, shifting to a multifunctional
localized approach to agriculture will require political will on
the part of policy makers, agribusinesses and donors of publicly
funded research to make more community-centered decisions about how
to invest limited resources.
Current education, training and extension structures are
incompatible with innovative approaches to AKST development. Most
agricultural scientists in SSA are trained and rewarded within a
narrow discipline, reflecting the typically linear approaches to
research and extension that value "formal" scientific research and
learning over more tacit forms of farmer learning and local and
traditional knowledge. Proven approaches to research for
development have evolved recently, with more attention paid to
integrated solutions, spatial heterogeneity, tradeoffs, and
livelihood and environment outcomes rather than only productivity
issues. There has also been considerable emphasis in establishing
coherence and synergies among basic applied and adaptive research
as well as dissemination of results by encouraging collective
participation of universities, private sector, public research
organizations and civil society. New players, including some
international NGOs, have joined in knowledge generation.
In SSA, the generation of formal knowledge and scientific
development rests predominantly with a research system comprising
national and international agricultural research organizations,
universities and the private sector [Ch 3]. Often this research
system is slow and inadequate in its response to challenges. This
is partly due to poor access to current global literature and
expertise. Typically it can also be attributed to education systems
that inadequately prepare scientists to carry out effective
research, and to poor linkages between education, research and
extension. Education is still centered on learning facts rather
than developing skills in problem solving and is constrained by
disciplinary boundaries.
Options include improving the connections between education,
research and extension systems, moving to problem-based learning,
removing outdated disciplinary paradigms and updating the research
approaches and tools being taught. Training can be expanded to
include the socioeconomic and policy environment in which
agricultural development occurs, and field-based research with
farmers. A new cadre of specialists is needed who are able to offer
technical support in appropriate tools and approaches. However,
scientists are less likely to choose to undertake longer-term
participatory and integrated research unless there are changes in
the professional reward system that is currently based
predominantly on the generation of data at meso and macro levels.
There is scope to explore the potential for efficiencies in
regional graduate training models. The large number of small
countries in Africa means it is often difficult for individual
universities to achieve a critical mass of teachers in specialized
areas such as biotechnology. Appropriately designed regional
training approaches may provide a solution. However, rather than
creating new regional institutions, self-initiated efforts building
on regional specializations within existing universities and then
developing networked training programs to attract students from a
regional watershed are likely to be more cost effective and have
more impact, particularly in the short term.
New approaches to AKST generation that increase farmer involvement
and include local and traditional knowledge naturally incorporate
and enhance farmers' own technical skills and research
capabilities. However, SSA is the only region where formal
education and government services function formally in languages
different from the first languages of almost the entire citizenry.
This linguistic divide, which reduces the scope for combining
formal science and technology and local and traditional knowledge,
can be addressed in part through the increased use and
understanding of local languages when working with farmers.
Increasing the functional literacy and general education levels
among rural communities, especially women, has already been proven
to increase the likelihood of achieving development and
sustainability goals. Additional options include specific
curriculum reform that addresses the key skills required to empower
individuals and communities to engage in the development and use of
AKST, increase the likelihood of local and traditional knowledge
being incorporated, and drive and contribute to agricultural
product and service development. Specific actions to mainstream
women's involvement include strategies that encourage women to
study agricultural and engineering sciences and social sciences;
and effort to ensure that extension, data collection and
enumeration involve women both as providers as well as recipients.
For example, 83% of extension officials in SSA are men who, due to
cultural norms cannot, or may choose not to speak to women.
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