Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends

The aim of this paper is to provide an in-depth assessment of Sub-Saharan Africa's human resource capacity in agricultural research based on the wealth of detailed human capacity data collected through the Agricultural Science and Technology Indicators (ASTI) initiative. The region's overall agricul...

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Autores principales: Beintema, Nienke M., Rahija, Michael
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154507
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author Beintema, Nienke M.
Rahija, Michael
author_browse Beintema, Nienke M.
Rahija, Michael
author_facet Beintema, Nienke M.
Rahija, Michael
author_sort Beintema, Nienke M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The aim of this paper is to provide an in-depth assessment of Sub-Saharan Africa's human resource capacity in agricultural research based on the wealth of detailed human capacity data collected through the Agricultural Science and Technology Indicators (ASTI) initiative. The region's overall agricultural R&D capacity has increased notably in recent years. In addition to this increase in absolute numbers, female participation improved in many countries and comparatively more researchers hold PhD and MSc degrees—although the share of those qualified to the BSc level increased for some countries during 2001-08. Nevertheless, many countries, especially some of the region's smallest, still have very low (and in a few cases declining) levels of human resource capacity. Agricultural research continues to be extremely fragmented, with most countries focusing on a large number of subsectors and wide range of crops, which remains the dominant subsector. Furthermore, after years of civil service recruitment freezes, many countries have disproportionately young and inexperienced teams of agricultural scientists in need of further training and mentoring, combined with disproportionately older senior scientists, many of whom are nearing retirement age. A further problem due to years of underfunding in many countries is the need to improve salary levels, conditions of service, facilities and equipment, and networking and career-development opportunities, which are fundamental to successfully attracting and retaining the kind of scientists needed to address the multitude of research challenges that await.
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spelling CGSpace1545072025-11-06T03:44:24Z Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends Beintema, Nienke M. Rahija, Michael investment agricultural research The aim of this paper is to provide an in-depth assessment of Sub-Saharan Africa's human resource capacity in agricultural research based on the wealth of detailed human capacity data collected through the Agricultural Science and Technology Indicators (ASTI) initiative. The region's overall agricultural R&D capacity has increased notably in recent years. In addition to this increase in absolute numbers, female participation improved in many countries and comparatively more researchers hold PhD and MSc degrees—although the share of those qualified to the BSc level increased for some countries during 2001-08. Nevertheless, many countries, especially some of the region's smallest, still have very low (and in a few cases declining) levels of human resource capacity. Agricultural research continues to be extremely fragmented, with most countries focusing on a large number of subsectors and wide range of crops, which remains the dominant subsector. Furthermore, after years of civil service recruitment freezes, many countries have disproportionately young and inexperienced teams of agricultural scientists in need of further training and mentoring, combined with disproportionately older senior scientists, many of whom are nearing retirement age. A further problem due to years of underfunding in many countries is the need to improve salary levels, conditions of service, facilities and equipment, and networking and career-development opportunities, which are fundamental to successfully attracting and retaining the kind of scientists needed to address the multitude of research challenges that await. 2011 2024-10-01T14:01:57Z 2024-10-01T14:01:57Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154507 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa Beintema, Nienke M.; Rahija, Michael. 2011. Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends. Conference Working paper 12. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154507
spellingShingle investment
agricultural research
Beintema, Nienke M.
Rahija, Michael
Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title_full Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title_fullStr Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title_full_unstemmed Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title_short Human resource allocations in african agricultural research: revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
title_sort human resource allocations in african agricultural research revealing more of the story behind the regional trends
topic investment
agricultural research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154507
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