Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting

The objective of this guide is to provide agricultural research managers with an approach to program planrting and priority setting that will enable them to plan better research programs that are more relevant to users' needs and that make the best use of limited resources. The different steps of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Collion, Marie-Hélène, Kissi, Ali
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Service for National Agricultural Research 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136320
_version_ 1855532532967145472
author Collion, Marie-Hélène
Kissi, Ali
author_browse Collion, Marie-Hélène
Kissi, Ali
author_facet Collion, Marie-Hélène
Kissi, Ali
author_sort Collion, Marie-Hélène
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The objective of this guide is to provide agricultural research managers with an approach to program planrting and priority setting that will enable them to plan better research programs that are more relevant to users' needs and that make the best use of limited resources. The different steps of the approach are illustrated with a real-life example, that of a program-planrting and priority-setting exercise carried out at the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Morocco. With the help of this guide, research managers should be able to apply the approach themselves. In this guide, the word program designates a coherent grouping of research activities, all relating to a specific field: this could be a commodity or a group of commodities (e.g., the Rice Program or the Cereals Program), an agroecological zone (e.g., the Arid Zone Program or the Highlands Program), a production system (e.g., intensive animal husbandry), or a production factor (e.g., the Agricultural Mechanization Program or the Natural Resource Management Program). The purpose of the approach is to turn research into an engine for agri-cultural development. National development objectives and the constraints faced by users are the twin starting points of any research planning process. These constraints should be carefully analyzed, so that the right technologies—ones that producers will be both willing and able to adopt—can be identified and/ or developed. The evaluation of existing research results is a further important ingredient in the planning process. Future activities can only be based on currently available results, and national research must derive maximum benefits from the knowledge and technology developed elsewhere. These three factors must underpin all research objectives and projects.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace136320
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1995
publishDateRange 1995
publishDateSort 1995
publisher International Service for National Agricultural Research
publisherStr International Service for National Agricultural Research
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1363202025-01-09T06:04:09Z Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting Collion, Marie-Hélène Kissi, Ali agriculture research management planning research policies The objective of this guide is to provide agricultural research managers with an approach to program planrting and priority setting that will enable them to plan better research programs that are more relevant to users' needs and that make the best use of limited resources. The different steps of the approach are illustrated with a real-life example, that of a program-planrting and priority-setting exercise carried out at the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Morocco. With the help of this guide, research managers should be able to apply the approach themselves. In this guide, the word program designates a coherent grouping of research activities, all relating to a specific field: this could be a commodity or a group of commodities (e.g., the Rice Program or the Cereals Program), an agroecological zone (e.g., the Arid Zone Program or the Highlands Program), a production system (e.g., intensive animal husbandry), or a production factor (e.g., the Agricultural Mechanization Program or the Natural Resource Management Program). The purpose of the approach is to turn research into an engine for agri-cultural development. National development objectives and the constraints faced by users are the twin starting points of any research planning process. These constraints should be carefully analyzed, so that the right technologies—ones that producers will be both willing and able to adopt—can be identified and/ or developed. The evaluation of existing research results is a further important ingredient in the planning process. Future activities can only be based on currently available results, and national research must derive maximum benefits from the knowledge and technology developed elsewhere. These three factors must underpin all research objectives and projects. 1995-12 2024-01-04T07:48:10Z 2024-01-04T07:48:10Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136320 en Open Access application/pdf International Service for National Agricultural Research Collion, Marie-Hélène, Kissi, Ali. 1995. Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting. International Service for National Agricultural Research
spellingShingle agriculture
research
management
planning
research policies
Collion, Marie-Hélène
Kissi, Ali
Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title_full Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title_fullStr Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title_full_unstemmed Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title_short Guide to Program Planning and Priority Setting
title_sort guide to program planning and priority setting
topic agriculture
research
management
planning
research policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136320
work_keys_str_mv AT collionmariehelene guidetoprogramplanningandprioritysetting
AT kissiali guidetoprogramplanningandprioritysetting