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Applying a Systems Framework to Research on African Farming Systems CRP1.1 Regional Inception Workshop East and Southern Africa 5-7 June 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Applying a Systems Framework to Research on African Farming Systems CRP1.1 Regional Inception Workshop East and Southern Africa 5-7 June 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Applying a Systems Framework to Research on African Farming Systems CRP1.1 Regional Inception Workshop East and Southern Africa 5-7 June 2012

2 Expanding Global Agendas and Increasing Demands on Agricultural Research  Global food security under increasing land and water constraints  Provision of ecosystem services and eco-efficiency of farming systems  Adaptation and mitigation to climate change  Agroecological intensification of smallholder agriculture and poverty

3 Changing Research Methods and Technology Design  Production systems research  Integrating ecological science  Place-based research methods  Research consortia  Scaling up integrated into research design  Flexible institutional arrangements

4 Design Issues in Production System CGIAR Research Programs  Target Area Selection  Research Site Selection -Target area characterization -Research hypotheses -Methodology for research site selection -Baseline and monitoring of system change  Methods for Research on Farming Systems

5 Developing the Science of System Intensification Data and Analytics for:  Characterization and targeting  Extrapolation  Baseline and monitoring  Causal relationships -System change -Comparative frameworks

6 Design Characteristics for Analyzing African Farming Systems  Heterogeneity: system boundaries and classification strata -Spatial Characterization -Within site household stratification  System Change and Dynamics: drivers and intensification pathways  Embeddedness: landscape, market/sub-sector, agricultural sector

7 Implementation programs INSTITUTIONALMANAGEMENT EXOGENOUSENDOGENOUS Livelihood Capitals Livelihood strategies Institutions and policy network Key variables Spatial Scale

8 Structure of Farm/Household System  Asset base: five capitals  Production activities  Household objectives: -Subsistence/food security -Risk management -Income Within site variability: typologies

9 System Boundaries and Classification Frameworks Hierarchical Classification  Land use: Cultivated land within managed natural ecosystems  First order spatial classification -Agroecology: eg semi-arid, highlands -Crop-livestock interaction: eg pastoral  Staple food crop: spatially contiguous?  Sub-system speciation

10 System Speciation East African Highland Banana Systems Utilization  Matoke: Uganda  Beer bananas: Rwanda and Burundi  Enset: Ethiopia Crop Management  Commercial: southwest Uganda  Soil fertility constrained: Bukoba

11 System Variation and System Performance System Performance -Productivity, profitability, income -Vulnerability, food security -Resource efficiency, resilience System Variation -Spatial/causal comparative frameworks -Within-site socio-economic variation

12 Drivers of System Change  Rural population growth -Declining farm size -Increasing inequity in farm distribution -Pressure on common resources and natural capital  Improvements in Market Access -Transaction costs and input/output -Staple terms of trade  Changes in agroecology from climate change or biotic pandemics

13 Relative Prices and Marginal Returns to Nitrogen Application Marginal Return (kg) Relative Price Kenya: HYV Maize 19.916.0 Kenya: Recycled Maize 16.116.0 Uganda: HYV Maize 25.033.7 Uganda: Recycled Maize 25.233.7

14 Pathways of System Change  Intensification of existing production patterns: sustainable and unsustainable  Diversification of production  Expanded farm size or herd size: high vs low population densities  Increased off-farm income: expanding non-farm rural economy vs transfers  Exit from agriculture

15 East Africa: Average Farm Income, 2004-06 KenyaUgandaEthiopia Per Capita Income 36715494 % Crop Income 366453 % Livestock Income 241334 % Non Farm Income 422912

16 Kenya: Crop Diversification Indices by Zone

17 Markets as a Driver of Farming System Evolution Stage in Farming System Evolution Farmer ObjectivePrincipal Driver Static EquilibriumSubsistence DominatesRural Population Growth DiversificationBoth Income and Subsistence <Shifting Farm Gate Terms of Trade <Staple Food Productivity SpecializationIncome Dominates<Price Signals in Efficient Markets <Regional Competition and Comparative Advantage


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