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Tools, Principles or Policies?AuthorAndy Hall
Rasheed Sulaiman
Tesfaye Beshah
Elias Madzudzo
Ranjitha Puskur
United Nations University (Hall); Centre for Research on Innovation and Science Policy (CRISP; Sulaiman); International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI; Beshah, Madzudzo, Puskur) Publication DateSeptember 1, 2009
Summary
"...future programmes focusing on innovation capacity development will need to have much broader goals than today's often subsector- or problem-oriented projects. More use will need to be made of formative reviews and dialogues with donors and other stakeholders to determine the desirability of different, broader sets of action." This article explores a growing trend in the field of agricultural development: thinking in terms of innovation systems rather than just focusing on research. To illustrate this change, the authors describe the Fodder Innovation Project (FIP), which is being carried out by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and the United Nations University (UNU-MERIT), Maastricht, the Netherlands. The purpose of FIP is to explore whether the long-standing problem of fodder scarcity in India and Nigeria could be tackled by focusing on innovation capacity development rather than technology development. (Per Wikipedia: "In agriculture, fodder or animal feed is any foodstuff that is used specifically to feed domesticated livestock..."). In general, "an innovation system is made up of the individuals and organisations that demand and supply knowledge and technologies, as well as the policies and mechanisms that affect the way different agents interact to share, access and exchange knowledge." A starting point for FIP - and any practitioners working from an innovation system perspective - is how we understand innovation capacity. First, the authors explain, it includes not just technological artefacts (or the expertise and information within research organisations that are required to produce them) but - beyond that - the process through which research-based knowledge and context-specific knowledge are combined for the development of solutions that actually work in a certain context. Second, "innovation capacity includes a system or network of multiple nodes of expertise. Users of new products and services, such as farmers and consumers, are prominent nodes in their own right. These systems are often informal, adaptive and transient, and are characterised by the context in which they emerge..." As the authors explain, key elements in the FIP project, which is being played out in 5 research sites, include the following:
Although the project is still in its early stages, lessons are emerging. The authors detail a few:
FIP has developed some generic principles that others can use to help facilitate capacity development (both, they say, must be adhered to):
ContactAndy Hall
Rasheed Sulaiman
Centre for Research on Innovation and Science Policy (CRISP)
Hyderabad
India
Tesfaye Beshah
Elias Madzudzo
Ranjitha Puskur
SourceCapacity.org, Issue 37, September 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site September 18 2009 Last Updated September 21 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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