Andy Hall and Susanna Thorp report 16 September 2009 on SciDev.Net that "Agriculture needs better innovation, not technology."
Image Above: The foddodder Innovation Project takes an innovation systems approach to fodder scarcity. Credit: 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.
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Andy Hall and Susanna Thorp report 16 September 2009 on SciDev.Net that "Agriculture needs better innovation, not technology."
Image Above: The foddodder Innovation Project takes an innovation systems approach to fodder scarcity. Credit: 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.
Read More . . .
Are you absolutely sure you want to delete this article? This process cannot be undone and is permanent.
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