Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions

The central development question in African agriculture is how to catalyze a more competitive, equitable and sustainable agricultural growth within the context of smallholder production systems, inefficient agricultural marketing, inefficient investments by private sector amidst degradation prone na...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tenywa, M.M., Rao, K.P.C., Buruchara, Robin Arani, Kashaija, I., Majaliwa, J.D., Tukahirwa, J.M.B., Adekunle, A.A., Fatunbi, A.O., Mugabe, J., Wanjiku, C., Mutabazi, S., Pali, Pamela N., Mapatano, S., Lunze, Lubanga, Mugabo, J., Ngaboyisonga, C.M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2011
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3563
_version_ 1855516544005570560
author Tenywa, M.M.
Rao, K.P.C.
Buruchara, Robin Arani
Kashaija, I.
Majaliwa, J.D.
Tukahirwa, J.M.B.
Adekunle, A.A.
Fatunbi, A.O.
Mugabe, J.
Wanjiku, C.
Mutabazi, S.
Pali, Pamela N.
Mapatano, S.
Lunze, Lubanga
Mugabo, J.
Ngaboyisonga, C.M.
author_browse Adekunle, A.A.
Buruchara, Robin Arani
Fatunbi, A.O.
Kashaija, I.
Lunze, Lubanga
Majaliwa, J.D.
Mapatano, S.
Mugabe, J.
Mugabo, J.
Mutabazi, S.
Ngaboyisonga, C.M.
Pali, Pamela N.
Rao, K.P.C.
Tenywa, M.M.
Tukahirwa, J.M.B.
Wanjiku, C.
author_facet Tenywa, M.M.
Rao, K.P.C.
Buruchara, Robin Arani
Kashaija, I.
Majaliwa, J.D.
Tukahirwa, J.M.B.
Adekunle, A.A.
Fatunbi, A.O.
Mugabe, J.
Wanjiku, C.
Mutabazi, S.
Pali, Pamela N.
Mapatano, S.
Lunze, Lubanga
Mugabo, J.
Ngaboyisonga, C.M.
author_sort Tenywa, M.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The central development question in African agriculture is how to catalyze a more competitive, equitable and sustainable agricultural growth within the context of smallholder production systems, inefficient agricultural marketing, inefficient investments by private sector amidst degradation prone natural resources base (Lynam and Blackie, 1994; IAC, 2004; World bank, 2006 ). Concerted scholarly analyses of Science and Technology (S&T) strategies have given birth to Integrated Agricultural Research for Development (IAR4D) an organizing concept of the Innovation Systems Approach (ISA) as the promise holder. It is hypothesized that the generation, diffusion and application of impactful innovations critically depend on systemic integration of knowledge systems that promote communication, interaction and cooperation between agricultural research, education, extension, farmers, private sector and policy regulatory systems. This paper examines how the different institutional innovations arising from various permutations of linkages and interactions of ARD organizations (national, international advanced agricultural research centres and universities) influenced the different outcomes in addressing identified ARD problems. A multi-institutional, multi-disciplinary phased Participatory Action Research approach was used to pool knowledge to address outstanding and emerging challenges in three countries 25 (DRC, Rwanda and Uganda) with 2, 16 and 24 years out of conflict, respectively) of the Lake Kivu Pilot Learning Site. A landmark institutional innovation was the participatory establishment of twelve (12) Innovation Platforms as tools for pooling knowledge across the agricultural business, education, research and extension systems. The knowledge “pool” was to generate, diffuse and apply innovations to reduce transactions costs and create value chain based “win-win” situations. A number of innovations (e.g. International Public Goods-IPGs, market binding contracts, registered brands and/or certification processes, diversity, density and quality of networks/collective action, bulking centres, ICT application and depth of knowledge pools) were initiated. There were major breakthroughs which included bringing on board non-traditional private sector and policy maker partners, overcoming the predominant “farmer handout syndrome”, building consensus and addressing common interest challenge. Making markets work, bringing various stakeholders including universities to the community and vice-versa, appreciation of indigenous knowledge system, propelling collective soil and water conservation and demand/utilization of technologies hitherto on-shelf were other very significant breakthroughs. Sustainable operations of the Innovation Systems knowledge “pool” nurturing institutional learning were ensured through the availability of a “functional body”. The body undertook the social enterprise of organizing farmers and traders, facilitating/brokering ARD organization linkages by using multi-media to build social capital to overcome emergent knowledge, credit, market, technology and resource degradation challenges under different policy regulatory systems.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace3563
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2011
publishDateRange 2011
publishDateSort 2011
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace35632025-11-12T04:25:22Z Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions Tenywa, M.M. Rao, K.P.C. Buruchara, Robin Arani Kashaija, I. Majaliwa, J.D. Tukahirwa, J.M.B. Adekunle, A.A. Fatunbi, A.O. Mugabe, J. Wanjiku, C. Mutabazi, S. Pali, Pamela N. Mapatano, S. Lunze, Lubanga Mugabo, J. Ngaboyisonga, C.M. The central development question in African agriculture is how to catalyze a more competitive, equitable and sustainable agricultural growth within the context of smallholder production systems, inefficient agricultural marketing, inefficient investments by private sector amidst degradation prone natural resources base (Lynam and Blackie, 1994; IAC, 2004; World bank, 2006 ). Concerted scholarly analyses of Science and Technology (S&T) strategies have given birth to Integrated Agricultural Research for Development (IAR4D) an organizing concept of the Innovation Systems Approach (ISA) as the promise holder. It is hypothesized that the generation, diffusion and application of impactful innovations critically depend on systemic integration of knowledge systems that promote communication, interaction and cooperation between agricultural research, education, extension, farmers, private sector and policy regulatory systems. This paper examines how the different institutional innovations arising from various permutations of linkages and interactions of ARD organizations (national, international advanced agricultural research centres and universities) influenced the different outcomes in addressing identified ARD problems. A multi-institutional, multi-disciplinary phased Participatory Action Research approach was used to pool knowledge to address outstanding and emerging challenges in three countries 25 (DRC, Rwanda and Uganda) with 2, 16 and 24 years out of conflict, respectively) of the Lake Kivu Pilot Learning Site. A landmark institutional innovation was the participatory establishment of twelve (12) Innovation Platforms as tools for pooling knowledge across the agricultural business, education, research and extension systems. The knowledge “pool” was to generate, diffuse and apply innovations to reduce transactions costs and create value chain based “win-win” situations. A number of innovations (e.g. International Public Goods-IPGs, market binding contracts, registered brands and/or certification processes, diversity, density and quality of networks/collective action, bulking centres, ICT application and depth of knowledge pools) were initiated. There were major breakthroughs which included bringing on board non-traditional private sector and policy maker partners, overcoming the predominant “farmer handout syndrome”, building consensus and addressing common interest challenge. Making markets work, bringing various stakeholders including universities to the community and vice-versa, appreciation of indigenous knowledge system, propelling collective soil and water conservation and demand/utilization of technologies hitherto on-shelf were other very significant breakthroughs. Sustainable operations of the Innovation Systems knowledge “pool” nurturing institutional learning were ensured through the availability of a “functional body”. The body undertook the social enterprise of organizing farmers and traders, facilitating/brokering ARD organization linkages by using multi-media to build social capital to overcome emergent knowledge, credit, market, technology and resource degradation challenges under different policy regulatory systems. 2011-01-20 2011-04-28T13:54:28Z 2011-04-28T13:54:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3563 en Open Access application/pdf Tenywa, M.M., Rao, K.P.C., Buruchara, R., Kashaija, I., Majaliwa, J.D., Tukahirwa, J.B., Adekunle, A.A., Fatunbi, A.O., Mugabe, J., Wanjiku, C., Mutabazi, S., Pali, P., Mapatano, S., Lunze, L., Mugabo, J. and Ngaboyisonga, C. 2011. Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions. Journal of Agriculture and Environmental Studies 2(1):24-55
spellingShingle Tenywa, M.M.
Rao, K.P.C.
Buruchara, Robin Arani
Kashaija, I.
Majaliwa, J.D.
Tukahirwa, J.M.B.
Adekunle, A.A.
Fatunbi, A.O.
Mugabe, J.
Wanjiku, C.
Mutabazi, S.
Pali, Pamela N.
Mapatano, S.
Lunze, Lubanga
Mugabo, J.
Ngaboyisonga, C.M.
Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title_full Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title_fullStr Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title_full_unstemmed Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title_short Institutional innovations for building impact-oriented agricultural research, knowledge and development institutions
title_sort institutional innovations for building impact oriented agricultural research knowledge and development institutions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3563
work_keys_str_mv AT tenywamm institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT raokpc institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT buruchararobinarani institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT kashaijai institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT majaliwajd institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT tukahirwajmb institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT adekunleaa institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT fatunbiao institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT mugabej institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT wanjikuc institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT mutabazis institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT palipamelan institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT mapatanos institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT lunzelubanga institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT mugaboj institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions
AT ngaboyisongacm institutionalinnovationsforbuildingimpactorientedagriculturalresearchknowledgeanddevelopmentinstitutions