Search Results - "research and development"

Refine Results
  1. Ethnoveterinary research and development by Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation

    Published 1997
    “…Ethnoveterinary research and development edited by Constance McCorkle, Evelyn Mathias and Tjaart W Schillhorn van Veen 1996 338pp ISBN I 85339 326 6…”
    Get full text
    News Item
  2. Challenges for research and development of goats by Devendra, C.

    Published 2000
    “…The challenges for research and Development of goats and the justification of increased productivity from them are discussed with reference to the presence of 94% of the total world population of about 674 million goats, numerous "improver breeds", interactions with the environment and socio-economic benefits to poor farmers. …”
    Get full text
    Conference Paper
  3. Gender topics on potato research and development by Mudege, Netsayi N., Sarapura Escobar, S., Polar, Vivian

    Published 2020
    “…This chapter discusses how gender relations that favor men influence women’s participation in and their ability to benefit from potato production, marketing, and research for development. The review shows that potato research has been increasingly focusing on social determinants of potato farming because of the realization that purely technical solutions will not solve inefficiencies in potato production. …”
    Get full text
    Book Chapter
  4. Quality of Research for Development in the CGIAR Context by CGIAR Independent Science and Partnership Council

    Published 2017
    “…The ISPC is facilitating System-wide agreement on the nature and assessment of quality of research for development (QoR4D), and a working group on QoR4D was established in 2016 under ISPC chairmanship. …”
    Get full text
    Brief
  5. Underinvestment in Agricultural Research and Development Revisited by Roseboom, Johannes

    Published 2003
    “…Policymakers all over the world, but particularly in developing countries, are struggling with the claim that too little is being invested in public agricultural research and development (R&D). This briefing paper tries to clarify the issue by introducing a simple, stylized model is based on the concept of an ex ante choice set of all conceivable agricultural R&D projects, which, when ranked by their expected rate of return (ERR), form a distribution that increases steadily (and, we assume, exponentially) with decreasing ERR. …”
    Get full text
    Brief

Search Tools: