Idiomas disponibles:
Fechado: marzo 2024
Autores: Frank Tchuwa , Kate Wellard , Katrien Descheemaeker , Rebecca Nelson , Ric Coe , Rodrigo Paz Y , Peter Gubbels , Jane Maland Cady , Marah Moore , Bettina Haussmann , Mary Richardson
A paper, published in the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, giving an overview of the Collaborative Crop Research Program's (now known as the Global Collaboration for Resilient Food Systems, or CRFS) work supporting farmer research networks (FRNs), and the insights gained through these efforts.
Abstract:
In 2013, the Collaborative Crop Research Program (McKnight Foundation), initiated support for farmer research networks (FRNs). FRNs were envisaged as a general approach to networked participatory research aimed at supporting the agroecological intensification (AEI) of smallholder farming in ten countries in Africa and the Andes region in South America. The 30 FRNs ranged in size from 15 to more than 2,000 farmers. Rather than imposing a rigid FRN model, the programme used principles to guide action and reflection. The principles concerned ways of working with farmers, conducting research, and networking. This approach made it possible to reflect on how principles were interpreted, implemented, and used to guide learning in different contexts. This paper reports on insights gained from facilitated learning from 2013–2019 and focuses on subsets of diverse FRNs. Of the 30 FRNs supported, four were analyzed at some depth, reports and interviews were analyzed for 16, and a survey was conducted for 21. Relying on principles rather than an operational model has allowed for their progressive application, as participatory processes, farmer engagement, organizational capital, trust, and networks are built. Any reduced clarity and coherence seem outweighed by greater adaptability to context and resulting creativity.
The individual components of the trove are listed below. Click on one to download the file or go to the external url. You can download the full trove below as a .zip file.
Full Article: Farmer research networks in principle and practice
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14735903.2021.1930954
Vídeo
Farmer Research Networks in Malawi as a socially just model of inclusive knowledge co-creation
This is a recording of a presentation which was originally given by Dr Romina De Angelis at the UKFIET confere...