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Agriculture needs better innovation, not technology

Andy Hall and Susanna Thorp

16 September 2009 | EN | FR

The Fodder Innovation Project takes an innovation systems approach to fodder scarcity

WRENmedia

Pilot projects in India and Nigeria point to possible benefits of a new approach to agricultural innovation, say Andy Hall and Susanna Thorp.

We live in an era of unprecedented technological advancement. So why does technical change in agriculture continue to be slow and patchy?

One possible explanation is that the importance of farmers' capacity to access and use information for innovation has been overshadowed by the conventional view that change is driven primarily by new technology and farmer-led technical improvements.

Similarly, insufficient attention may have been given to the fact that the capacity for innovation in agriculture is influenced not only by farmers' skills and resources, but also by the wider network of links and relationships in which farmers are embedded, which help ideas to diffuse and find new uses.

These hypotheses are currently being tested by a research project in India and Nigeria on the long-standing problem of fodder scarcity, using what is widely referred to as an 'innovation systems' perspective.

Rather than focus directly on new fodder technologies — such as new varieties, fodder banks or alternative cropping patterns — the five pilot projects that make up the Fodder Innovation Project (FIP) concentrate on strengthening networks and changing working practices.

Emerging lessons

The project is still in its early stages. But some interesting lessons are already beginning to emerge. One is that although mapping links between livestock-related players can quickly identify missing or weak connections, establishing or strengthening them requires more than just setting up a committee to talk about collective action. Practical collaboration on concrete activities is essential.

In India, for example, the Foundation for Ecological Security (FES), FIP's partner in Rajasthan, began by consulting livestock-related players on how they could work together. But real collaboration only started when representatives of veterinary services and dairies from both the public and private sectors were invited to cattle health 'camps' in villages in which FES was working.

Another Indian example of the way that developments can proceed in unexpected directions is provided by a pilot project in Puducherry. This started by experimenting with small-scale fodder enterprises. But it soon discovered that milk prices were a more important bottleneck than fodder scarcity, as they were too low to make it worthwhile buying fodder. The work has now shifted to tackling milk pricing directly.

In Nigeria, FIP has led to a new and, for Nigeria, novel partnership on research into the surveillance of livestock disease between an NGO the Justice and Peace Commission (JDPC) and the Nigerian Veterinary Research Institute. Another FIP partner in Nigeria established links that helped ensure the rapid reporting of an outbreak of animal disease, and in implementing a vaccination programme to prevent its spread.

Even dealing with fodder scarcity doesn't necessarily mean starting with fodder itself, or with fodder technology. In Kano, Nigeria, for example, FIP has been helping farmers create co-operatives and access credit, both of which are providing them with incentives to invest in fodder seed and production.

A flexible approach

There is clearly no one way to facilitate change in agricultural practices. Each situation is unique, and the key is not to work with a fixed set of players, but to be able to respond flexibly to challenges and opportunities as they emerge.

In each of the locations in which FIP is carrying out its work, government organisations, research institutes, and private sector players — such as dairy co-operatives — either have a mandate to improve farmers' livelihoods, or need to provide help to farmers as part of their business model.

As experience in both India and Nigeria has demonstrated, boosting agricultural innovation by getting these actors to network effectively requires a local champion to build interest and encourage interaction.

So far, the demand for technical research expertise at each project site has been fairly limited. But as the capacity for change is strengthened, and as livestock production systems are upgraded, there is likely to be an increased demand for knowledge, including from livestock research organisations. When this happens, livestock research will be drawn into these largely developmental activities, and thus become an integrated part of the capacity for technical change and innovation.

These promising early experiences with fodder innovation resonate with other experiences based on innovation systems' thinking, such as the sub-Saharan Africa challenge programme being run by the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa, and the UK Department for International Development's Research Into Use programme. Both of these programmes have learnt the hard way that an innovation systems perspective is not a quick fix, but both have also seen that strengthening networks lays the foundations for innovation.

Strengthening innovation capacity cannot be done overnight; it involves readjusting the roles and working practices of many organisations — a task that is messy, unpredictable, iterative and time-consuming.

But the results can add enormous value to both research and development practice, particularly if the two are well integrated. This itself presents a challenge, as there is a long-standing tradition of separating agricultural research from general development activities.

The main requirement for breaking this tradition is fundamental policy changes, not new tools for collective action.

Andy Hall is a researcher at UNU-MERIT and coordinates the Learning Innovation and Knowledge Initiative (LINK).
Susanna Thorp is director of WRENmedia, a UK-based communications company and editor of New Agriculturist.

Comments (1)

Dr.A.Jagadeesh ( Nayudamma Centre for Development Alternatives | India )

12 March 2010

In agriculture and rural development, the Innovation Systems (IS) could, for example, consist of research, extension, farmers, NGOs, private sector, cooperatives, farmers, and community based organizations. Specific IS, for instance, in dairy or fodder, could be defined by patterns of organization relevant to dairy or fodder, as each configuration is unique. However, this does not mean that there is no room for sharing generic principles on how to establish a comparable system in another domain within its own context .As the recent definition of the World Bank indicates, IS are embodied in a wider institutional and policy context to bring about behavioral changes and improve performance. These developments do not only refer to individual organizations within the network, but also to that of the system which is characterized by patterns of organization akin to actors involved. Taking this point even further, what a full-fledged IS depicts is the innovation capacity at system level rather than isolated capacities of component organizations .Therefore, the challenge is to achieve a genuine paradigm shift in research and development through increased understanding and application of IS thinking for agriculture and rural development. This should be based on the architecture on which it is crafted i.e., the link between structure and pattern, which are often implicit in IS literature. In India still rice plantation is done manually mostly by women in South India. They don’t wear any gum boot nor rubber gloves like in some countries. Nearly 6-8 hours in mud and water affects the skin. They just apply kerosene after washing their feet and hands.Also they don’t have any protection from sunlight. Caps like the one in Malaya will help them from scorching sun. Dr.A.Jagadeesh Nellore(AP) India

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