Monique Salomon PROLINNOVA South Africa STEPS Centre Symposium 2009 24 September
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Transcript of Monique Salomon PROLINNOVA South Africa STEPS Centre Symposium 2009 24 September
Monique SalomonPROLINNOVA South Africa
STEPS Centre Symposium 200924 SeptemberThe Freeman Centre, University of Sussex
PROLINNOVAGlobal networking for local innovativeness
Session 2: Grassroots/ bottom up innovation: How to facilitate emergence and
flourishing
Key concerns in this session
If and how can we:• Link grassroots to formal R&D?• Promote bottom-up initiatives without stifling
innovativeness and creativity?• Steer bottom-up innovations in environmentally
sustainable directions?
“Yes we can…. or at least we are working on it”
Who is “we”
PROmoting Local INNOVAtion in ecologically-oriented agriculture and natural resource management, in short PROLINNOVA
Est. 1999: as international multi-stakeholder network; connecting “islands of success” (e.g. LEISA, Promoting Farmer Innovation, Indigenous Soil and Water Innovations, Farmer Field Schools)
Focus: Farmers/resource users as innovators, stimulating their innovative capacity, and promote partnerships and methodologies that support local innovation processes
Over 100 organisations (Nov 2006)
15 country programmes and 3 regions
Africa: Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Moçambique, Niger, Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Sahel Region (Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal)
Asia: Cambodia, Nepal, Pacific Region (Solomon Islands)
Latin America: Andes Region (Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador)
Global Partnership Programme
What brings PROLINNOVA partners together
Farmers/local resource users are creative and innovators who generate relevant local innovations = new ways of doing things in that locality (software and hardware)
Farmer-led participatory innovation for sustainable development (PID) works and should be mainstreamed and institutionalized within formal R&D and education
Effective research and extension supports and stimulates local innovation processes, and forms strong partnerships with farmers, farmer organisations, Universities, R&D, and CSO’s
Vision
A world in which farmers (resource users) play decisive roles in agricultural research and
development for sustainable livelihoods
Community of practice
Farmers, development agents, scientists and policy makers engaging in open and democratic spaces to share experiences, learn from and support each other
Country-driven activities
Common elements:• Creating the evidence: Studies of local innovation,
farmer-led participatory innovation development (PID) on the ground, and Documenting this
• Establishing national and sub-national multi-stakeholder platforms for information sharing, joint learning and institutionalizing PID
• Capacity building and curriculum development in PID
• Policy dialogue and mainstreaming PID at local, district and national level
How the Programme “hangs together”
GovernanceCountry/regional programmes are hosted by local, experienced civil society organizations (CSO’s); Coordinated by multi-stakeholder steering committees, also at international level
Facilitation supportETC EcoCulture (Secretariat), IIRR Philippines, Centre for International Cooperation/Free University of Amsterdam, and IED Afrique
FundingDGIS (NL), and CTA, DURAS, EED, IFAD, Misereor, Oxfam-Novib, Research-into-Use, Rockefeller Foundation, Worldbank; Country Programmes are run with own contribution (cash and kind).
Linking grassroots to formal R&D
• “Tuning into” innovation by farmers/resource users (the eye opener)
• Document these (catalogues, databases, videos etc)• Share & promote (farmer-to-farmer, publications, mass media)
• Or develop further together (joint experimentation)• Building a “community of theory and practice”
Fish smoking oven (Niger)By M Saidou, JM Dipo, S Haoua, A Mamane
• South West Niger, men catch fish (“silure”: clarias garie pinus, labeo coubie) smoked by women in local oven (“Banda”)
• Banda selected by farmers for joint on-farm experimentation by interdisciplinary team (farmers, farmer innovators, researchers, academics, CSO agents and extension staff)
• 4 new oven designs developed, which were tested and compared (using farmer and scientist criteria and methods) with 4 traditional ovens on-site
• Results were shared at local, national and international levels
Fish smoking oven (cont.)Improved designs preferred:
Increased capacity and yield of smoked fish (from 50-80 kg to 250– 350 kg) and reduced wood use (from 1000 to 167 kg)
Safe use and reduced risk (burns, fire, theft,damage), Ease of work, timing, and weather conditions, freeing women to do other activities
Better sensory quality and shelf life -> higher commercial value of fish, and reputation of Boumba fish traders
Extra income spent on food, housing, social activities, and small stock
Improved household gender relations Female innovators start cooperative and strengthen
capacities (literacy of 16 women and 9 men)
7 new ovens built without external support Increased local demand, and product innovation:
smoking bought fish in new oven
Harnessing innovativeness and creativity
• Stimulate farmer-to-farmer learning (Fairs, markets, exchange visits, awards etc)
• Multi-media documenting of innovation(incl farmer-led documentation)
• Alternative funding mechanisms (Local Innovation Support Funds)
• Tapping into local solutions to global concerns (e.g. HIV/AIDS, climate change)
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Challenges
• PID training facilitates attitudinal/behavioural change, but no fundamental shifts within some Government organizations and unfavourable policy environments in many countries
• Hardware/production technology bias; need process orientation and focus on “soft” innovations (social organization, access to resources, marketing)
• Development challenges need triple-bottom line solutions (ecological, social, economic)
Contact us
PROLINNOVA International Secretariatc/o ETC EcoCultureKastanjelaan 5, P.O. Box 633830 AB Leusden, The NetherlandsTel +31 33 432 6024 E-mail [email protected] www.prolinnova.net