Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.

Research and development efforts to strengthen farmers’ linkage with markets often focus on the systematic assessment of market chains, formulation of pro-poor policy recommendations, and the introduction of macro level enabling mechanisms. Meanwhile there is growing recognition of the critical need...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Campilan, D.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66262
_version_ 1855533352453406720
author Campilan, D.
author_browse Campilan, D.
author_facet Campilan, D.
author_sort Campilan, D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Research and development efforts to strengthen farmers’ linkage with markets often focus on the systematic assessment of market chains, formulation of pro-poor policy recommendations, and the introduction of macro level enabling mechanisms. Meanwhile there is growing recognition of the critical need for action-learning approaches for enhancing smallholder producers’ capacity to better manage farm businesses within dynamic market chains. Traditional agricultural extension generally deals with production-focused, technology-driven learning content. Yet it is now widely acknowledged that farmers also need to acquire knowledge, skills and attitude to improve their participation in and benefit from market chains. The main objective of this paper is to analyze key learning approaches in enhancing farmers’ capacity to link with markets, in particular by comparing: 1) crop management- and marketing-based curricular frameworks, 2) farmer-group and chain wide participatory processes, 3) classroom- and field-oriented learning settings, and 4) single-activity and season-long learning designs. The paper assesses the emerging trends in farmer capacity strengthening towards a more experiential learning process with a market chain perspective — as exemplified by the participatory market chain approach and farmer business school. It highlights experiences and lessons from the root and tuber crops sector, drawn from collaborative work by the International Potato Center and partners in developing countries of Asia, Latin America and Africa. Finally the paper identifies needs and opportunities to further improve capacity strengthening approaches, including their potential adaptation and upscaling across agricultural market chains and contexts.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace66262
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateRange 2012
publishDateSort 2012
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace662622025-11-06T14:03:45Z Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets. Campilan, D. markets farm management farmer participation Research and development efforts to strengthen farmers’ linkage with markets often focus on the systematic assessment of market chains, formulation of pro-poor policy recommendations, and the introduction of macro level enabling mechanisms. Meanwhile there is growing recognition of the critical need for action-learning approaches for enhancing smallholder producers’ capacity to better manage farm businesses within dynamic market chains. Traditional agricultural extension generally deals with production-focused, technology-driven learning content. Yet it is now widely acknowledged that farmers also need to acquire knowledge, skills and attitude to improve their participation in and benefit from market chains. The main objective of this paper is to analyze key learning approaches in enhancing farmers’ capacity to link with markets, in particular by comparing: 1) crop management- and marketing-based curricular frameworks, 2) farmer-group and chain wide participatory processes, 3) classroom- and field-oriented learning settings, and 4) single-activity and season-long learning designs. The paper assesses the emerging trends in farmer capacity strengthening towards a more experiential learning process with a market chain perspective — as exemplified by the participatory market chain approach and farmer business school. It highlights experiences and lessons from the root and tuber crops sector, drawn from collaborative work by the International Potato Center and partners in developing countries of Asia, Latin America and Africa. Finally the paper identifies needs and opportunities to further improve capacity strengthening approaches, including their potential adaptation and upscaling across agricultural market chains and contexts. 2012 2015-05-19T10:56:16Z 2015-05-19T10:56:16Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66262 en Open Access application/pdf Campilan, D. 2012. Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets. In: Milligan, A. Brown, A. (eds). The supermarket revolution in food: Good, bad or ugly for the world's farmers, consumers and retailers?. Proceedings. 17. Annual Parliamentary Conference. Canberra (Australia). 14-16 Aug 2011. Barton (Australia). The Crawford Fund. ISBN 978-1-921388-21-7. pp. 30-36.
spellingShingle markets
farm management
farmer participation
Campilan, D.
Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title_full Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title_fullStr Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title_full_unstemmed Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title_short Market and supermarket issues for development. Enhancing farmers' capacity to link with markets.
title_sort market and supermarket issues for development enhancing farmers capacity to link with markets
topic markets
farm management
farmer participation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66262
work_keys_str_mv AT campiland marketandsupermarketissuesfordevelopmentenhancingfarmerscapacitytolinkwithmarkets