Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus

1.5 billion people live in fragility and conflict-affected settings (FCAS) and they face an increased risk of food insecurity and poverty trap. A systems approach in collaboration with innovators in FCAS is needed to produce practical and inclusive solutions that can improve the resilience of food,...

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Autores principales: Song, H., Sarangé, C., Oderoh, A., Dahl, Hauke, Jacobs-Mata, Inga
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Initiative on Fragility, Conflict, and Migration 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138687
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author Song, H.
Sarangé, C.
Oderoh, A.
Dahl, Hauke
Jacobs-Mata, Inga
author_browse Dahl, Hauke
Jacobs-Mata, Inga
Oderoh, A.
Sarangé, C.
Song, H.
author_facet Song, H.
Sarangé, C.
Oderoh, A.
Dahl, Hauke
Jacobs-Mata, Inga
author_sort Song, H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description 1.5 billion people live in fragility and conflict-affected settings (FCAS) and they face an increased risk of food insecurity and poverty trap. A systems approach in collaboration with innovators in FCAS is needed to produce practical and inclusive solutions that can improve the resilience of food, land, and water systems (FLWS). CGIAR is in the unique position to produce transformative policies, programming, and market strategies to bring science-driven innovation to improve resilience among FCA communities and create a bridge between the humanitarian, development, and peace (HDP) nexus. This market report conducts a market assessment across 14 countries in Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia to inform a science-driven acceleration programme to scale CGIAR innovations in FCAS. The analysis in the report is from a newly developed database on FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem actors, which includes 600+ innovator data covering 90+ solution types and 200+ funding supporters, including investors, governments, NGOs, hubs, and other collaborative ecosystem enablers. Additionally, the report draws insights from consultations with experts in the ecosystem ranging from CGIAR practitioners to innovation hubs and innovators (Chapter 1). The ecosystem mapping shows that the FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem is still nascent in many FCA countries, and is largely concentrated on food production. Water resources, migration, and anticipatory action innovations only take up 20% of all innovations. Financial support to enable private innovators has been rising and 25% of the innovators mapped in the selected countries have raised funding amounting to over $330M as of November 2023, with investors from the private sector paving the way and with public-private partnerships (PPPs) increasingly playing an important role. Funding support from private investors and PPPs support early-stage innovation development by creating hubs, de-risking funding by co-investing with the private sector, and directly providing financial support to the innovators. International donors, governments and investors from the Global North are also prevalent in the ecosystem as 90% of actors supporting innovators are from outside the FCA countries. Local actors often work with international actors to implement programmes, co-invest, and help source high-impact innovators. There is little evidence of international research organisations’ activities in the FCAS so far (Chapter 2). Developing a sustainable FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem in FCAS is met with challenges related to limited infrastructural resources, value chain disruptions, and heightened security risks. However, opportunities also exist, especially when innovators flexibly adapt innovations to address local challenges, and in settings where the solutions become tools to better facilitate and coordinate humanitarian, government, and private sector initiatives. Hence, supporting private sector innovation should prioritise localising solutions for the specific context to increase longerterm sustainability. Research organisations should support by developing systems to bring science to sector value chains and becoming expert support for innovators. Lastly, partnerships with governments, local actors, and international NGOs should be leveraged to bring innovations to tackle local challenges (Chapter 3). Finally, he report provides an overview of the macroeconomic and FCA context and an analysis of the FLW-HDP innovation ecosystem for each of the 14 countries The country overviews highlight that each country has a unique set of challenges and opportunities for developing a resilient innovation ecosystem, yet there are strong signals that innovators, support initiatives, and actors are making an impact in improving the conditions for FLW and HDP systems in FCA contexts (Chapter 4).
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spelling CGSpace1386872025-11-07T08:53:15Z Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus Song, H. Sarangé, C. Oderoh, A. Dahl, Hauke Jacobs-Mata, Inga ecosystems assessment food security land water systems humanitarian organizations non-governmental organizations peacebuilding nexus approaches innovation fragility conflicts migration 1.5 billion people live in fragility and conflict-affected settings (FCAS) and they face an increased risk of food insecurity and poverty trap. A systems approach in collaboration with innovators in FCAS is needed to produce practical and inclusive solutions that can improve the resilience of food, land, and water systems (FLWS). CGIAR is in the unique position to produce transformative policies, programming, and market strategies to bring science-driven innovation to improve resilience among FCA communities and create a bridge between the humanitarian, development, and peace (HDP) nexus. This market report conducts a market assessment across 14 countries in Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia to inform a science-driven acceleration programme to scale CGIAR innovations in FCAS. The analysis in the report is from a newly developed database on FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem actors, which includes 600+ innovator data covering 90+ solution types and 200+ funding supporters, including investors, governments, NGOs, hubs, and other collaborative ecosystem enablers. Additionally, the report draws insights from consultations with experts in the ecosystem ranging from CGIAR practitioners to innovation hubs and innovators (Chapter 1). The ecosystem mapping shows that the FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem is still nascent in many FCA countries, and is largely concentrated on food production. Water resources, migration, and anticipatory action innovations only take up 20% of all innovations. Financial support to enable private innovators has been rising and 25% of the innovators mapped in the selected countries have raised funding amounting to over $330M as of November 2023, with investors from the private sector paving the way and with public-private partnerships (PPPs) increasingly playing an important role. Funding support from private investors and PPPs support early-stage innovation development by creating hubs, de-risking funding by co-investing with the private sector, and directly providing financial support to the innovators. International donors, governments and investors from the Global North are also prevalent in the ecosystem as 90% of actors supporting innovators are from outside the FCA countries. Local actors often work with international actors to implement programmes, co-invest, and help source high-impact innovators. There is little evidence of international research organisations’ activities in the FCAS so far (Chapter 2). Developing a sustainable FLWS-HDP innovation ecosystem in FCAS is met with challenges related to limited infrastructural resources, value chain disruptions, and heightened security risks. However, opportunities also exist, especially when innovators flexibly adapt innovations to address local challenges, and in settings where the solutions become tools to better facilitate and coordinate humanitarian, government, and private sector initiatives. Hence, supporting private sector innovation should prioritise localising solutions for the specific context to increase longerterm sustainability. Research organisations should support by developing systems to bring science to sector value chains and becoming expert support for innovators. Lastly, partnerships with governments, local actors, and international NGOs should be leveraged to bring innovations to tackle local challenges (Chapter 3). Finally, he report provides an overview of the macroeconomic and FCA context and an analysis of the FLW-HDP innovation ecosystem for each of the 14 countries The country overviews highlight that each country has a unique set of challenges and opportunities for developing a resilient innovation ecosystem, yet there are strong signals that innovators, support initiatives, and actors are making an impact in improving the conditions for FLW and HDP systems in FCA contexts (Chapter 4). 2023-12-31 2024-01-30T10:57:05Z 2024-01-30T10:57:05Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138687 en Open Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Initiative on Fragility, Conflict, and Migration Song, H.; Sarangé, C.; Oderoh, A.; Dahl, Hauke; Jacobs-Mata, Inga. 2023. Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Initiative on Fragility, Conflict, and Migration. 85p.
spellingShingle ecosystems
assessment
food security
land
water systems
humanitarian organizations
non-governmental organizations
peacebuilding
nexus approaches
innovation
fragility
conflicts
migration
Song, H.
Sarangé, C.
Oderoh, A.
Dahl, Hauke
Jacobs-Mata, Inga
Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title_full Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title_fullStr Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title_full_unstemmed Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title_short Ecosystem assessment of food, land, and water actors in the humanitarian, development, and peace nexus
title_sort ecosystem assessment of food land and water actors in the humanitarian development and peace nexus
topic ecosystems
assessment
food security
land
water systems
humanitarian organizations
non-governmental organizations
peacebuilding
nexus approaches
innovation
fragility
conflicts
migration
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138687
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