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Making research work for smallholder farmers

Smallholder farming systems make up a majority of farms in low-income countries, contributing to 50-80% of food consumed in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia. Yet, smallholder farming in these regions remains generally inefficient with low productivity rates, and smallholders face obstacles in terms of technology, market, and capital access.

Ebba Engström, Anneli Sundin / Published on 10 December 2020

At a goat farm in Laos. Photo: Anneli Sundin, SEI

These challenges are compounded by constraints caused by climate change and associated environmental degradation. However, it is crucial that the potential of these farming systems is seized, to ensure food and nutrition security in the regions, together with continued rural and economic development.

AgriFoSe2030 (Agriculture for Food Security) has the aim of developing smallholder agriculture and providing the means for the scaling up of smallholder farming enterprises in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and South Asia. To do this, AgriFoSe2030 takes an approach which focuses on bridging relevant research centred on smallholder farming with policy and practice, impacting smallholders. The programme has the specific objective of enabling researchers in the given regional areas to become more involved in policymaking processes. This involves capacity-building amongst researchers to communicate and direct their work effectively, together with network development between researchers and decision-makers.

In November 2020, AgriFoSe2030 saw the launch of its second programme phase. Within this phase, certain projects established as part of Phase I, focusing on various smallholder farming challenges, as well as entirely new projects, will be taken forward. As such, the programme team have put together videos to provide further insight into four of its projects which started in Phase I and will continue in Phase II. The videos showcase projects taking place in Burkina Faso, Kenya, Laos and South Africa.

The projects [in the videos] truly showcase how AgriFoSe2030 embodies inclusivity- smallholder farmers are made central [participants] to the research

Kuntum Melati, SEI Asia during AgriFoSe2030 Launch event 24 November

In this first video, Josias Sanou, senior scientist at INERA in Burkina Faso, presents a project which focuses on parkland management for improved food crops production. Within this project, he has helped to set up and test a dialogue platform called “Innovative Platform for Parkland Management”. This has proven a success in terms of getting information out to relevant stakeholders and making sure they are heard in the process of developing better management practices for parklands. There are plans to develop additional dialogue platforms, especially within the realms of supporting agroecological practices amongst parkland farmers.

In this video, Josias Sanou, a senior scientist at INERA in Burkina Faso, presents a project which focuses on parkland management for improved food crop production.

In the following video, we are introduced to Dr. Daovy Kongmanilla’s project based in Laos, regarding goat management. Dr. Kongmanilla is a senior researcher at the National University of Laos. Goats can provide a source of income for Lao farmers, however farmers face a key challenge of upkeeping animal health. The project thus links researchers with farmer groups to contribute to disease prevention as part of their goat management. Within Phase II, the project will develop to place a further focus on linking the farmer groups with domestic and export markets for goat products.

In this video, we are introduced to Dr. Daovy Kongmanilla’s project based in Laos, regarding goat management. Dr. Kongmanilla is a senior researcher at the National University of Laos.

The third video shows an AgriFoSe2030 project focusing on urban agriculture in Kenya, presented by Dr. Samuel Onyango Omondi, postdoc researcher at the University of Nairobi. The project’s objectives have been to produce sustainable urban agriculture policies which support improved farming practices, and to build on expertise in Nairobi to implement urban agriculture policies and activities in other cities in Kenya. These objectives have been part of an approach which emphasises the socioeconomic dimensions of farming. In the continuation of the project, the team will zoom out and look at how urban agriculture can contribute to the overall transformation of food systems in Kenya’s urban areas.

This video shows an AgriFoSe2030 project focusing on urban agriculture in Kenya, presented by Dr. Samuel Onyango Omondi, senior researcher at the University of Nairobi.

Lastly, a fourth project is looking at practices for low-cost and sustainable crop disease prevention by using biological products, rather than chemical pesticides. Through AgriFoSe2030, farm trials, using the biological preventions on potato plants, were carried out. These farms were run mainly by women or young farmers. The demonstrations showed the potential of phosphate, and botanical extracts, in making potato plants more resistant to aggressive potato pathogens. Listen to Dr. Lerato Matsaunyane, plant breeding scientist at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria, South Africa, talk about the project in the video below.

Dr. Lerato Matsaunyane, plant breeding scientist at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria, South Africa, presents an AgriFoSe2030 project in this video. The project is looking at practices for low-cost and sustainable crop disease prevention by using biological products, rather than chemical pesticides.

The AgriFoSe2030 programme is a multi-partner collaboration, with its key coordinating institutions being the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Lund University (LU), Gothenburg University (GU) and the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI). It is continuously developing with the help of its collaborative partners and clear-cut mission. These highlighted projects are thus stepping-stones in supporting smallholder farming. With the programme’s unique approach of building capacities amongst the researchers themselves, locally – as well as establishing links between them and other stakeholders in society – the programme has potential for true, long-term impact.

More about AgriFoSe2030

SEI supports AgriFoSe2030 researchers in communication and engagement. We link researchers with policymakers and practitioners, through dialogues, joint projects and platforms for mutual learning. We also give tailored support to individual projects in communication and engagement strategies.

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