Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers

Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) seeks to improve productivity for the achievement of food security (pillar 1: Productivity), to develop a better ability to adapt (pillar 2: Adaptation), and to limit greenhouse gas emissions (pillar 3: Mitigation). Technical and organizational innovations are need...

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Autores principales: Andrieu, Nadine, Howland, Fanny C., Acosta-Alba, Ivonne, Le Coq, Jean-François, Osorio, Ana Milena, Chia, Eduardo
Formato: Manual
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97065
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author Andrieu, Nadine
Howland, Fanny C.
Acosta-Alba, Ivonne
Le Coq, Jean-François
Osorio, Ana Milena
Chia, Eduardo
author_browse Acosta-Alba, Ivonne
Andrieu, Nadine
Chia, Eduardo
Howland, Fanny C.
Le Coq, Jean-François
Osorio, Ana Milena
author_facet Andrieu, Nadine
Howland, Fanny C.
Acosta-Alba, Ivonne
Le Coq, Jean-François
Osorio, Ana Milena
Chia, Eduardo
author_sort Andrieu, Nadine
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) seeks to improve productivity for the achievement of food security (pillar 1: Productivity), to develop a better ability to adapt (pillar 2: Adaptation), and to limit greenhouse gas emissions (pillar 3: Mitigation). Technical and organizational innovations are needed to find synergies among those three pillars. Innovation (its creation and its operation) is a social phenomenon. Many studies worldwide have shown that promoting a sustainable change and innovation within organizations has to be analyzed and implemented with stakeholders. Thus, the ability of local actors to tackle climate change and mitigate its effects will depend on their ability to innovate and mobilize material and non-material resources, to articulate links among national policies, not only between themselves, but also undertaking actions at the local level. To support stakeholders in the development of responses to this challenge, we propose the development of open innovation platforms, in which all local actors may participate. These platforms are virtual, physical, or physico-virtual spaces to learn, jointly conceive, and transform different situations; they are generated by individuals with different origins, different backgrounds and interests (Pali and Swaans, 2013).
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spelling CGSpace970652024-01-23T12:04:41Z Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers Andrieu, Nadine Howland, Fanny C. Acosta-Alba, Ivonne Le Coq, Jean-François Osorio, Ana Milena Chia, Eduardo climate change agriculture food security Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) seeks to improve productivity for the achievement of food security (pillar 1: Productivity), to develop a better ability to adapt (pillar 2: Adaptation), and to limit greenhouse gas emissions (pillar 3: Mitigation). Technical and organizational innovations are needed to find synergies among those three pillars. Innovation (its creation and its operation) is a social phenomenon. Many studies worldwide have shown that promoting a sustainable change and innovation within organizations has to be analyzed and implemented with stakeholders. Thus, the ability of local actors to tackle climate change and mitigate its effects will depend on their ability to innovate and mobilize material and non-material resources, to articulate links among national policies, not only between themselves, but also undertaking actions at the local level. To support stakeholders in the development of responses to this challenge, we propose the development of open innovation platforms, in which all local actors may participate. These platforms are virtual, physical, or physico-virtual spaces to learn, jointly conceive, and transform different situations; they are generated by individuals with different origins, different backgrounds and interests (Pali and Swaans, 2013). The purpose of this manual is to provide a seven-step methodology to allow family farmers to co-build and adopt CSA options to tackle climate change in an open innovation platform 2018-09-04 2018-09-04T15:05:04Z 2018-09-04T15:05:04Z Manual https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97065 en Open Access application/pdf Andrieu N, Howland F, Acosta-Alba I, Osorio A-M, Le Coq J-F, Chia E. 2018. Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers. Wageningen, the Netherlands: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
Andrieu, Nadine
Howland, Fanny C.
Acosta-Alba, Ivonne
Le Coq, Jean-François
Osorio, Ana Milena
Chia, Eduardo
Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title_full Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title_fullStr Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title_full_unstemmed Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title_short Methodological Guide to Co-design Climate-smart Options with Family Farmers
title_sort methodological guide to co design climate smart options with family farmers
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97065
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