Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for...
ລາຍລະອຽດຊຸດຂໍ້ມູນ:
The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped to support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The...
ແຫຼ່ງທີ່ມາ: Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture
ຂໍ້ມູນເພີ່ມເຕີມ
| ຊ່ອງຂໍ້ມູນ | ມູນຄ່າ |
|---|---|
| ການອັບເດດຂໍ້ມູນລ່າສຸດ | 12 ພະຈິກ 2024 |
| Metadata ອັບເດດຫຼ້າສຸດ | 19 ສິງຫາ 2025 |
| ສ້າງ | 12 ພະຈິກ 2024 |
| ຮູບແບບ | |
| ໃບອານຸຍາດ | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
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| Datastore contains all records of source file | False |
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| Mimetype | application/pdf |
| Name translated | {'en': 'Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture', 'km': 'Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture', 'lo': 'Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture', 'my_MM': 'Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture', 'vi': 'Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture'} |
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| Resource description | {'en': 'The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped\r\nto support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches\r\ntaken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and\r\nopportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological\r\nintensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined\r\nwith innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective\r\nmatching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder\r\nagriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the\r\ndevelopment of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to\r\nsupport FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers.\r\nWhere farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most\r\nfeasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles,\r\nenable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable\r\nfarmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity\r\nfor technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the\r\nquality of rural life.', 'km': 'The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped\r\nto support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches\r\ntaken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and\r\nopportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological\r\nintensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined\r\nwith innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective\r\nmatching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder\r\nagriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the\r\ndevelopment of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to\r\nsupport FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers.\r\nWhere farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most\r\nfeasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles,\r\nenable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable\r\nfarmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity\r\nfor technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the\r\nquality of rural life.', 'lo': 'The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped\r\nto support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches\r\ntaken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and\r\nopportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological\r\nintensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined\r\nwith innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective\r\nmatching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder\r\nagriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the\r\ndevelopment of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to\r\nsupport FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers.\r\nWhere farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most\r\nfeasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles,\r\nenable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable\r\nfarmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity\r\nfor technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the\r\nquality of rural life.', 'my_MM': 'The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped\r\nto support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches\r\ntaken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and\r\nopportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological\r\nintensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined\r\nwith innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective\r\nmatching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder\r\nagriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the\r\ndevelopment of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to\r\nsupport FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers.\r\nWhere farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most\r\nfeasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles,\r\nenable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable\r\nfarmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity\r\nfor technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the\r\nquality of rural life.', 'vi': 'The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped\r\nto support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches\r\ntaken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and\r\nopportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological\r\nintensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined\r\nwith innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective\r\nmatching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder\r\nagriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the\r\ndevelopment of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to\r\nsupport FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers.\r\nWhere farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most\r\nfeasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles,\r\nenable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable\r\nfarmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity\r\nfor technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the\r\nquality of rural life.'} |
| Size | 392,3 KiB |
| State | active |
| Url type | upload |
| ຊື່ | Farmer Research Networks as a Strategy for Matching Diverse Options and Contexts in Smallholder Agriculture |
| ຄຳອະທິບາຍ | The agricultural research and development institutions in most developing countries are poorly equipped to support the needs of millions of smallholder farmers that depend upon them. The research approaches taken by these systems explicitly or implicitly seek simple, one-size-fits-all solutions for problems and opportunities that are extremely diverse. Radical change is needed to facilitate the agroecological intensification of smallholder farming. We propose that large-scale participatory approaches, combined with innovations in information and communications technology (ICT), could enable the effective matching of diverse options to the wide spectrum of socio-ecological context that characterize smallholder agriculture. We consider the requirements, precedents and issues that might be involved in the development of farmer research networks (FRNs). Substantial institutional innovation will be needed to support FRNs, with shifts in roles and relationships amongst researchers, extension providers and farmers. Where farmers’ organizations have social capital and strong facilitation skills, such alignments may be most feasible. Novel information management capabilities will be required to introduce options and principles, enable characterization of contexts, manage data related to option-by-context interactions and enable farmers to visualize their findings in useful and intelligible ways. FRNs could lead to vastly greater capacity for technical innovation, which could in turn enable greater productivity and resilience, and enhance the quality of rural life. |