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Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2 – Community level issues and interventions Aster Gebrekristos (ICRAF) Africa RISING Ethiopia project implementation meeting, Addis Ababa, 13-14 February 2013

Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

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Presented by Aster Gebrekristos (ICRAF) at the Africa RISING Ethiopia Project Implementation Meeting, Addis Ababa, 13-14 February 2013

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Page 1: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2 – Community

level issues and interventionsAster Gebrekristos (ICRAF)

Africa RISING Ethiopia project implementation meeting, Addis Ababa, 13-14 February 2013

Page 2: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Major development challenges in Ethiopia?

Land degradation low and erratic rainfall DeforestationScarcity of fuel wood compels farm households to burn manure and crop residues for household energy, decreasing yields and limiting the supply of animal feed Limited access to external inputs (fertilizer, seed, pesticides, specialized machinery and appropriate technologies)

Introduction

Page 3: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Can sustainable intensification overcome some of the development challenges? YES!

• Sustainable intensification of mixed tree-crop-livestock systems on farms and within farming landscapes can reverse land degradation, and improve crop productivity, livestock feed availability and food security (Garrity et al., 2010). Transform key production systems through sustainable

intensification

Overcoming the challenges

Page 4: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

The challenge

Fine grained variation in: soil (biota) climate (altitude) farming practices household characteristics market opportunities social capital policy and its implementation

Page 5: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

The requirementsIt requires making effective use of a combination of local ecological knowledge, farmer preferences, market opportunities and science-based understanding of component interactions

Community mobilization is key for success

It also requires strong partnership (among CG centers, partners...)

Page 6: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions
Page 7: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

RC2 will focus on exploiting the potential for peer-to-peer knowledge exchange within communities and on opportunities for strengthening and augmenting existing practises with external innovation.

The three key deliverables are:• Bio-physical and socio-economic benchmarks • Community knowledge exchange groups (CKEGs)• Opportunities for scaling innovation (endogenous and

exogenous)

Based on the out come of RC1 exsisting functional CKEGs and/or establish new

Main objectives of RC2

Page 8: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Research Questions• What benchmarks are appropriate for meeting the needs of

monitoring progress towards AR-EH / FtF development outcomes at the household level?

• How can CKEGs be constituted to make the best use of knowledge that already exists within communities and to act as a platform for the acquisition and application of new knowledge (intervention options)?

• How can gender equity be properly ensured in the formation and operation of CKEGs.

• How can communities be organised to capitalise on a range of opportunities for scaling innovation in ways that are both equitably targeted and cost effective?

Page 9: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Hypotheses

Based on proper characterisation and stratification (RC1), it is possible to constructs cost-effective suites of benchmarks that are effective sources of knowledge for communities, they can underpin meaningful M and E and do not require exhaustive and expensive household surveys.

Effective sharing of existing knowledge within communities through CKEGs can be effective in generating development outcomes before exogenous innovation is brought into play.

CKEGs can also form a strong platform for the introduction and integration of exogenous technologies.

A balanced analysis of endogenous and exogenous opportunities that focus on bottom-up integration rather than top-down introduction is a more effective mechanism for implementing sustainable intensification at a household level.

Page 10: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Approach

Bio-physical and socio-economic benchmarksCollate all the benchmarking data gathered under RC1 and develop a suite of benchmarks that addresses the needs of monitoring progress towards AR-EH / FtF development outcomes.Develop and test approaches for actively using benchmarks to inform discussion in CKEGs.Establish monitoring processes based on the suite of benchmarks selected.

Page 11: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Approach

Community knowledge exchange groupsEstablish CKEGs based on equitable gender participation and the opportunities for knowledge transfer amongst strata.Develop and test participatory approaches for peer-to-peer benchmarking as a driver of knowledge transfer.Develop and test approaches that would allow CKEGs to participate in driving research priorities for AR-EH.

Page 12: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Approach

Opportunities for scaling innovationIdentification of barriers to wider adoption of current practises within the community.Identification of solutions for lifting these barriers where feasible.Identification of entry points for exogenous technologies and management practices.

Page 13: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

A knowledge based systems approach (The AKT5 software)- will be employed (Sinclair and Walker, 1998)

Four stages of the knowledge elicitation process (Dixon et al., 2001)

Approach: Local ecological knowledge process

Page 14: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

The process Stakeholder analysis (to establish system boundaries and determine the different

strata of people who had an influence on the functioning of the system e.g farmers, Development Agents, Extension officers and village leaders etc)

Scoping, ( different PRA methods will be used such as social mapping and modelling, seasonality maps, participatory linkage diagrams and focus group discussions.

Definition(objectives will be redefined and then semi structured interviews will be prepared ) Stratified random sampling to select informants of equal number of male and female

Compilation phase involved repeated interaction with key informants, Knowledge representation and evaluation of emerging knowledge base

Page 15: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Participatory resource mapping: integrating trees in fields, farms and landscapes

Page 16: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Participatory resource mapping of the farming system

Page 17: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

• What do farmers know and explain well?• Drivers and challenges• Why do farmers do the way they do (e.g positioning of trees on farms)• Source of exsisting technologies (Endogenous and exogenous)• processes of change (what works well)- (strong community leader, existing

CKEGs , Model farmers?)• Identify knowledge gaps and Demand driven Intervention options (build on what we have (entry point)

and/or introduce new technologies)

Compilation and generalisation

Page 18: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Farmers attending a feedback sessionevaluated for coherence and consistency of the information-Build trust

Page 19: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Forms of interventionIntervention = target practice + associated practices + enabling environment

controlled grazing

trees in other farm niches

trees in crop fields

social capital that enables collective grazing management

Secure user right or tenure land and tree

quality seed / seedling supply or encouragement of FMNR

Page 20: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

The training team discussing with local administrators and extension workers of Abreha We Atsibha village (12th of June, 2012)• Training for two weeks (class, field ,

interview and feedback) AKT5 local knowledge acusition

• Capacity building of seven local experts • One MSc student defended her thesis ongoing training in Melkassa

Local knowledge training using the AKT5 software and methodology

Capacity development

Page 21: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Characterize variation across scaling domain acquire local knowledge identify strengths and weaknesses (knowledge gaps)

• Design scaling so that promising options are tested across sufficient range to refine our understanding of what works where and for whom measure performance of options Fit options to sites and farmer circumstances

Establish participatory approach with farmers in which uncertainty and risk are understood, acknowledged and progressively reduced

leave to farmers what they do best but learn collectively and systematically from experience

The approach

Page 22: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Contributors• ICRAFDr Aster Gebrekirstos Dr. Kiros HadguDr Fergus Sinclair Dr Ermias AynekuluMrs Martha Cronin

• ILRI• National partners

Thank you for your attention!!!Amesegenaleu!

Page 23: Proposals for Africa RISING Ethiopian Highlands Research Component 2—Community level issues and interventions

Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation

africa-rising.net