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Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

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Page 1: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands

Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Page 2: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

INSARD

3-year project developed by six African and EU partners:

ESAFF (Tanzania) ETC AgriCulture (Netherlands) GRET (France) REPAOC (Senegal) PELUM (Zambia) Practical Action (UK)

that promote ARD partnerships working toward innovation systems that are more farmer-led.

Page 3: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Aim of INSARD

“To ensure an informed participation of a broad range of European and African civil society organisations in the formulation and implementation of ARD policies.”

Some of the participants in the INSARD consultation workshop, Nairobi, Nov 2011

Page 4: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Main tasks of INSARD

Design mechanisms that allow CSOs to participate effectively in ARD decision-making in SSA and Europe

Link African and European CSOs that seek to influence ARD policy and practice for/in SSA

Help CSOs define research priorities and best ways to communicate these to researchers and policymakers

Work with other stakeholders to strengthen demand-led and ecologically oriented ARD

Stimulate greater resource flows to such research with and for smallholders

Page 5: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Start-up study: “mapping” of African & European CSOs in ARD in SSA

Carried out by Mutizwa Mukute & Tafadzwa Marange, Zimbabwe, in consultation with INSARD team

To identify formal and informal linkages among CSOs and other stakeholders involved in ARD

To identify potentials and blockages in ARD to realising greater participation of CSOs in deciding on resource allocation, priorities and implementation

To discover how, where and by whom decisions for resource allocation for ARD in SSA are made

Page 6: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

ARD agenda-setting mechanisms in which CSOs (could) engage – 1 –

International GFAR: Global Forum for Agricultural Research

GCARD: Global Conference on Agricultural Research for Development

CGIAR: Consultative Group of International Agricultural Research

FAO: Food and Agriculture Organisation & its Committee on World Food Security (CFS)

BetterAid Forum / People’s Coalition on Food Sovereignty / High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness

Page 7: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

ARD agenda-setting mechanisms in which CSOs (could) engage – 2 –

SSA / Europe FARA: Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa ASARECA: Association for Strengthening of Agricultural

Research in Eastern and Central Africa CCARDESA: Centre for the Coordination of Agricultural

Research and Development for Southern Africa CORAF / WECARD: West and Central African Council for

Agricultural Research and Development PAEPARD: Platform for African–European Partnership in

Agricultural Research for Development EFARD: European Forum for Agricultural Research and

Development

Page 8: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

International mechanisms for resource allocation in ARD in SSA

GDPRD: Global Donor Platform for Rural Development limited attention to ARD but recently set up working group to map ARD resources and track ARD investments

EIARD: European Initiative on Agricultural Research for Development

CGIAR Fund Council: 65% of EU and member country ARD funding goes to CGIAR

About 40 multilateral and bilateral donors identified: most donors have no CSO space in decision-making structures

Page 9: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

ARD resource allocation in SSA countries

Science & Technology/Agricultural Research Funds

African governments giving more importance to agriculture as basis for economic development, e.g. CAADP, Maputo Declaration

Increasing role of some SSA governments in funding ARD: up to 50%

Many SSA governments have budget-making processes that invite CSO input, but stay at sector level (not ARD)

Examples of innovative programmes to increase smallholders’ access to ARD resources and capacity to decide on what research to conduct and with whom: Local Innovation Support Funds (LISFs)

Page 10: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Trends in ARD expenditure in SSA since 1998 (IFPRI 2011)

10 countries increasing: Benin, Burundi, DR Congo, Ghana, Mauritania, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda

10 countries decreasing: Eritrea, Gabon, Guinea, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Niger, Senegal, Zambia, Zimbabwe

5 steady: Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa

5 fluctuating: Burkina Faso, Botswana, Gambia, Kenya, Mali

Key determinants of ARD funding levels and trends: economic performance social and political stability relative priority given to ARD donor support

Page 11: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Challenges faced by CSOs in influencing ARD investment policy

CSOs do not have enough knowledge about resource-allocation mechanisms

Competing interests among CSOs

Little capacity to jointly influence resource-allocation systems and processes

Lack of mandate to speak on behalf of others

Insufficient space for CSOs to engage with donors

Perceived or actual lack of capacity to generate evidence to back up CSO positions

Page 12: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Opportunities for CSO involvement in deciding on ARD investment

Shifting global thinking about role of CSOs in ARD (e.g. IAASTD)

Provision for CSO involvement in some ARD structures at different levels (e.g. GFAR, FARA, SRFs, NARS)

Growing realisation of need for different kind of agricultural research (to enhance innovation systems)

Page 13: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Study recommendations – 1

CSOs should increase their involvement in ARD governance & resource-allocation structures by:

Ensuring effective occupation of spaces set aside for CSOs in such structures

Lobbying for new spaces for CSO inclusion in such structures

Forming grounded national and regional CSO-ARD platforms

Developing CSO capacities to mobilise resources for this

Lobbying donors to include and monitor smallholder-farmer & agro-ecological impact indicators in ARD

Page 14: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Study recommendations – 2

In resource-allocation structures, CSOs should push for investing ARD resources in line with IAASTD recommendations:

Smallholders should be involved in agenda setting and implementation through participatory research because they are critical to food security and poverty alleviation

ARD should support effective ways of working with different knowledge systems and practices that enhance agro-ecological practices

Page 15: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

CSO info needs for tracking ARD investment

How are ARD investment priorities determined?

Who decides on fund allocation on basis of what criteria / indicators (e.g. focus on / involvement of smallholders)?

To what extent is partnership involving CSOs required in the ARD, and what are roles of CSOs in this partnership?

On what types of agricultural systems are ARD funds being spent?

Page 16: Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC AgriCulture, Netherlands Tracking ARD investment and civil society organisation (CSO) involvement

Conclusion

ARD partnerships that genuinely involve CSOs so that

research becomes more smallholder-focused and

ecologically oriented can be developed only if adequate

human and financial resources are generated for them

and enough time is provided for their evolution.

Thank you

For more information, please contact:

[email protected]