Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies

Executive Summary This report presents the results of the innovation network analysis, territorial technical accompaniment processes, and advances in the adoption and scaling of agricultural innovations promoted by CIMMYT Innovation Hubs in Mexico and Guatemala during 2025, within the framework of...

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Main Authors: García Santiago, Jorge Octavio, Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe, Ovando, Rausel, Jiménez, Benancio, May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai, Van Loon, Jelle
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Español
Published: CIMMYT 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180023
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author García Santiago, Jorge Octavio
Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe
Ovando, Rausel
Jiménez, Benancio
May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai
Van Loon, Jelle
author_browse Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe
García Santiago, Jorge Octavio
Jiménez, Benancio
May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai
Ovando, Rausel
Van Loon, Jelle
author_facet García Santiago, Jorge Octavio
Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe
Ovando, Rausel
Jiménez, Benancio
May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai
Van Loon, Jelle
author_sort García Santiago, Jorge Octavio
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Executive Summary This report presents the results of the innovation network analysis, territorial technical accompaniment processes, and advances in the adoption and scaling of agricultural innovations promoted by CIMMYT Innovation Hubs in Mexico and Guatemala during 2025, within the framework of the CGIAR Scaling for Impact (S4I) Science Program. The work was carried out primarily across five strategic Innovation Hubs—three in Mexico (the Yucatán Peninsula, Oaxaca, and Chiapas) and two in Guatemala (Western and Eastern Guatemala)—which together form a network of hubs aimed at articulating actors, capacities, and knowledge to support the validation, adaptation, and scaling of regenerative agriculture packages. Through systematic network mapping and analysis exercises, the interinstitutional structures, levels of connectivity, patterns of centralization, and the strategic roles of key actors in each territory were characterized. The results show that the networks analyzed generally exhibit low levels of density and varying degrees of centralization. While this configuration enables efficient short-term operational coordination, it also reveals structural challenges for sustained scaling. Across all hubs, the potential for impact is not constrained by actor diversity or territorial coverage, but rather by the need to strengthen horizontal connectivity, redistribute articulation capacities, and consolidate deeper collaboration mechanisms that facilitate collective learning and the large-scale adoption of innovations. In parallel, the report documents the implementation of the territorial technical accompaniment model and the capacity strengthening strategy, which are core pillars of the Hub approach. During 2025, a total of 15,114 producers and 4,344 technical advisors were trained, strengthening technical, methodological, and organizational capacities that enable adoption and scaling processes. These efforts resulted in a total area of 39,691 hectares reached and the direct participation of 30,832 farmers, exceeding the annual target established by the program. Overall, the findings confirm that the strategic management of networks, when integrated with technical accompaniment and capacity strengthening, is a critical factor for the effective scaling of agricultural innovations. The progress achieved in 2025 positions the Innovation Hubs as functional platforms for connecting local efforts with regional and national actors, laying the groundwork for the consolidated network of hubs to operate, by 2030, as the backbone for large-scale scaling of promising technological packages, in line with CGIAR’s transformative vision.
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spelling CGSpace1800232026-01-17T02:12:03Z Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies García Santiago, Jorge Octavio Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe Ovando, Rausel Jiménez, Benancio May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai Van Loon, Jelle innovation scaling stakeholder engagement regenerative agriculture boundaries Executive Summary This report presents the results of the innovation network analysis, territorial technical accompaniment processes, and advances in the adoption and scaling of agricultural innovations promoted by CIMMYT Innovation Hubs in Mexico and Guatemala during 2025, within the framework of the CGIAR Scaling for Impact (S4I) Science Program. The work was carried out primarily across five strategic Innovation Hubs—three in Mexico (the Yucatán Peninsula, Oaxaca, and Chiapas) and two in Guatemala (Western and Eastern Guatemala)—which together form a network of hubs aimed at articulating actors, capacities, and knowledge to support the validation, adaptation, and scaling of regenerative agriculture packages. Through systematic network mapping and analysis exercises, the interinstitutional structures, levels of connectivity, patterns of centralization, and the strategic roles of key actors in each territory were characterized. The results show that the networks analyzed generally exhibit low levels of density and varying degrees of centralization. While this configuration enables efficient short-term operational coordination, it also reveals structural challenges for sustained scaling. Across all hubs, the potential for impact is not constrained by actor diversity or territorial coverage, but rather by the need to strengthen horizontal connectivity, redistribute articulation capacities, and consolidate deeper collaboration mechanisms that facilitate collective learning and the large-scale adoption of innovations. In parallel, the report documents the implementation of the territorial technical accompaniment model and the capacity strengthening strategy, which are core pillars of the Hub approach. During 2025, a total of 15,114 producers and 4,344 technical advisors were trained, strengthening technical, methodological, and organizational capacities that enable adoption and scaling processes. These efforts resulted in a total area of 39,691 hectares reached and the direct participation of 30,832 farmers, exceeding the annual target established by the program. Overall, the findings confirm that the strategic management of networks, when integrated with technical accompaniment and capacity strengthening, is a critical factor for the effective scaling of agricultural innovations. The progress achieved in 2025 positions the Innovation Hubs as functional platforms for connecting local efforts with regional and national actors, laying the groundwork for the consolidated network of hubs to operate, by 2030, as the backbone for large-scale scaling of promising technological packages, in line with CGIAR’s transformative vision. 2025-12 2026-01-16T21:36:28Z 2026-01-16T21:36:28Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180023 es Open Access application/pdf CIMMYT CGIAR García Santiago, J. O., Diaz Espinosa, A., Ovando Galdámez, J. R., Jiménez Gomez, B., May Tzun, V. N., & Van Loon, J. (2025). Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies. CIMMYT, & CGIAR. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/36728
spellingShingle innovation scaling
stakeholder engagement
regenerative agriculture
boundaries
García Santiago, Jorge Octavio
Diaz Espinosa, Anabell Guadalupe
Ovando, Rausel
Jiménez, Benancio
May Tzun, Vladimir Nikolai
Van Loon, Jelle
Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title_full Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title_fullStr Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title_full_unstemmed Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title_short Multistakeholder networks in Mexico and Guatemala for scaling co-validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
title_sort multistakeholder networks in mexico and guatemala for scaling co validated bundles of regenerative agriculture technologies
topic innovation scaling
stakeholder engagement
regenerative agriculture
boundaries
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180023
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