Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America

In 2022, the Malabo Montpellier Panel published a report that made the case for African countries to embrace a bioeconomy approach to meet their agrifood systems transformation and economic growth ambitions. The Panel systematically identified four African countries at the forefront of transitioning...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Glatzel, Katrin, Virchow, Detlef, Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S., Niyonsenga, Seraphin, Babu, Suresh Chandra, Srivastava, Nandita, Kashandula, Progress, Ecuru, Julius, Osano, Philip
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: AKADEMIYA2063 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155083
_version_ 1855519697986912256
author Glatzel, Katrin
Virchow, Detlef
Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S.
Niyonsenga, Seraphin
Babu, Suresh Chandra
Srivastava, Nandita
Kashandula, Progress
Ecuru, Julius
Osano, Philip
author_browse Babu, Suresh Chandra
Ecuru, Julius
Glatzel, Katrin
Kashandula, Progress
Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S.
Niyonsenga, Seraphin
Osano, Philip
Srivastava, Nandita
Virchow, Detlef
author_facet Glatzel, Katrin
Virchow, Detlef
Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S.
Niyonsenga, Seraphin
Babu, Suresh Chandra
Srivastava, Nandita
Kashandula, Progress
Ecuru, Julius
Osano, Philip
author_sort Glatzel, Katrin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In 2022, the Malabo Montpellier Panel published a report that made the case for African countries to embrace a bioeconomy approach to meet their agrifood systems transformation and economic growth ambitions. The Panel systematically identified four African countries at the forefront of transitioning to a bioeconomy to better understand how different governments choose their own context-specific bioeconomy development pathways (Malabo Montpellier Panel 2022). Building on this analysis, this chapter provides a snapshot of how different countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America are choosing their own context-specific bioeconomy entry points and pathways. It provides an update of the analyses by the Panel on the cases of Ghana, Namibia, and Uganda. In addition, this chapter shows how Brazil and Thailand have embraced a bioeconomy transition to support learning not just across borders, but across regions.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace155083
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher AKADEMIYA2063
publisherStr AKADEMIYA2063
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1550832025-11-06T03:56:33Z Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America Glatzel, Katrin Virchow, Detlef Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S. Niyonsenga, Seraphin Babu, Suresh Chandra Srivastava, Nandita Kashandula, Progress Ecuru, Julius Osano, Philip bioeconomy governance In 2022, the Malabo Montpellier Panel published a report that made the case for African countries to embrace a bioeconomy approach to meet their agrifood systems transformation and economic growth ambitions. The Panel systematically identified four African countries at the forefront of transitioning to a bioeconomy to better understand how different governments choose their own context-specific bioeconomy development pathways (Malabo Montpellier Panel 2022). Building on this analysis, this chapter provides a snapshot of how different countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America are choosing their own context-specific bioeconomy entry points and pathways. It provides an update of the analyses by the Panel on the cases of Ghana, Namibia, and Uganda. In addition, this chapter shows how Brazil and Thailand have embraced a bioeconomy transition to support learning not just across borders, but across regions. 2024-10-03 2024-10-02T16:57:49Z 2024-10-02T16:57:49Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155083 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152447 Open Access application/pdf application/pdf AKADEMIYA2063 International Food Policy Research Institute Glatzel, Katrin; Virchow, Detlef; Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S.; Niyonsenga, Seraphin; Babu, Suresh; Srivastava, Nandita; and Kashandula, Progress. 2024. Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. In Advancing the climate and bioeconomy agenda in Africa for resilient and sustainable agrifood systems, eds. Getaw Tadesse, Katrin Glatzel, and Moumini Savadogo. Chapter 9, Pp. 116-149. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155083
spellingShingle bioeconomy
governance
Glatzel, Katrin
Virchow, Detlef
Nakitto, Aisha Musaazi S.
Niyonsenga, Seraphin
Babu, Suresh Chandra
Srivastava, Nandita
Kashandula, Progress
Ecuru, Julius
Osano, Philip
Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title_full Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title_fullStr Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title_short Bioeconomy pathways: Experience from Africa, Asia, and Latin America
title_sort bioeconomy pathways experience from africa asia and latin america
topic bioeconomy
governance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155083
work_keys_str_mv AT glatzelkatrin bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT virchowdetlef bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT nakittoaishamusaazis bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT niyonsengaseraphin bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT babusureshchandra bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT srivastavanandita bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT kashandulaprogress bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT ecurujulius bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica
AT osanophilip bioeconomypathwaysexperiencefromafricaasiaandlatinamerica