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Supporting small-scale farmers and rural organisations: Learning from
experiences in West Africa. A handbook for development operators and local
managers
Edited by Sylvain Perret and Marie-Rose Mercoiret
Copublished by Protea Book House and CIRAD
Email: librairie@cirad.fr
Website: www.cirad.fr
2003, 320pp, ISBN 1 919825 92 4 (Protea), 2 87614 505 7 (CIRAD)(Pb), €26
Agriculture in Africa is changing. As public and private organisations
engage in redefining their roles one change is seen consistently: rural
people are increasingly expected to take a more active, participatory
role in rural development. To help them, extension workers and development
agents are crucial advisors and mediators. And to help these agents, this
book offers a guide to successful farmer support based on the experiences
of the authors in West Africa. Acknowledging that "The differences in
the reality are so great that no one can ensure that what has succeeded
in one place will also succeed elsewhere", the authors encourage the reader
to analyse situations and apply the given methods, approaches and tools
to develop their own ideas. First published in French in 1994, this volume
presents well-structured information that is still very much relevant
for the anglophone countries of sub-Saharan Africa at which it is targeted.
It would be a useful resource text for extension training courses.
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A new agenda for forest conservation and poverty reduction: Making markets
work for low income producers
By Sara J. Scherr, Andy White and David Kaimowitz
Published by Forest Trends
Website: www.forest-trends.org
2004, 170pp, ISBN 0 9713606 6 9(Pb), free (also available as a free download
from the Forest Trends website)
More than one billion people currently live in the world's 19 forest
biodiversity hotspots, and the great majority of poor people living in
these areas depend on forest products for either all or part of their
livelihoods. The future of the world's remaining forests and of its poorest
people is thus inextricably linked, yet the dominant models of forest
management and protection - large scale logging in commercial forest concessions,
industrial forest plantations and the creation of protected areas - fail
to address this reality, depriving poor communities of land and contributing
little to rural livelihoods. What is needed, according to the authors
of this extended paper, is a fundamental reassessment of the role of forests
in rural development and of local people in forest conservation.
At the heart of that reassessment is the need for local people to have
access to forest markets, and to make those markets work for low income
producers. The authors identify a number of niche products where opportunities
exist for those producers, including high-value and certified woods. But
exploiting such niches depends on the development of local forest enterprises
and the removal of policy barriers to market participation. This extremely
coherent 'new agenda' explains the context of forest market development,
and presents strategies for communities, local organisations and policy
makers that promote forest conservation while contributing to local livelihoods
and community development.
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Building
on successes in African agriculture
Edited by Steven Haggblade
Published by IFPRI
Website: www.ifpri.org
Email: ifpri@cgiar.org
2004, 20pp, (Pb), available free from IFPRI
The last decade has seen a number of success stories in African agriculture.
The development of disease resistant cassava varieties has led to huge
production increases, benefiting small scale farmers, commercial growers
and urban consumers in many parts of the continent. In Mali, cotton production
is growing steadily at 9% per year, and smallholder dairy production has
become the fastest growing source of farm income in Kenya. Such successes
are encouraging, but can they guide future, widespread and sustained development
in Africa's agricultural production? For the authors of this collection
of briefs, the answer is yes, but not in the sense that they necessarily
indicate which technologies should be replicated. Agricultural technologies
tend to be very location specific. Rather the case studies are used to
identify the background issues that were key to the technology success;
for example, the role played by institutions, policy and investments.
It is these that policy-makers need to understand in order to translate
these scattered examples of success into systemwide improvements in performance.
The document was originally collated for the IFPRI 2020 conference, 'Assuring
Food and Nutrition Security in Africa by 2020' held in April this year,
and can be downloaded,
or ordered as a hard copy, from the IFPRI website.
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Water
matters for sustainable agriculture: A collection of case studies
Published by CropLife International
Website: www.croplife.org
2004, 22pp Available as free download. Hard copies can also be ordered
online.
"CropLife International has produced this publication of water-related
case studies from around the world to increase awareness on the issue
[of the challenges of sustainable water management in agriculture]." It
also serves a public relations purpose for the commercial plant science
companies that form the CropLife network. The brief case studies, often
no more than a single paragraph, are not very informative at a scientific
level (though further information on some of them is available on the
CropLife website). They are however interesting in the breadth of cooperation
they reveal: universities and non-profit research institutes in both developed
and developing countries feature in several studies alongside Monsanto,
BASF, Bayer and others. This publication should prompt non-profit organizations
to seek more collaboration with industry.
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Working
animals in agriculture and transport: A collection of some current research
and development observations
Edited by R.A. Pearson, P. Lhoste, M. Saastamoinen and W. Martin-Rosset
Published by Wageningen Academic Publishers
Website: www.wageningenacademic.com
2003, 210pp, ISBN 1570 7318, ISSN 9076998256(Pb), €40
This is a rather diverse collection of papers sharing the theme of research
connected to animal power, which is still widely used in many developing
and some industrialized countries. Some of the papers were presented at
the 2002 annual conference of the European Association for Animal Production;
others were added later to broaden and balance the content. Subjects include
feeding, management and harnessing issues, and research and development
potential in Africa. The full contents list is available on the publisher's
website.
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