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Note 1: Some Internet browsers open this PowerPoint presentation so that you must depress the F 5 key to start the presentation. If a left mouse click.

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Presentation on theme: "Note 1: Some Internet browsers open this PowerPoint presentation so that you must depress the F 5 key to start the presentation. If a left mouse click."— Presentation transcript:

1 Note 1: Some Internet browsers open this PowerPoint presentation so that you must depress the F 5 key to start the presentation. If a left mouse click anywhere in THIS slide or depressing the “Down Arrow” key displays the next slide, depressing the F 5 key to start the presentation is not necessary. Please note that some of the following slides have yellow, underlined words or phrases at the bottom of the slide. When these are selected (left clicked), another PowerPoint slide will be displayed. To exit (close) this slide and continue viewing the main presentation, depress the Esc (Escape) key; that slide will close and you will be returned to the slide you were viewing in the main presentation. If this does not function as stated, please see Note 2, below. Note 2: Some Internet browsers (Windows Explorer, for example) require you to click the “Back” icon in the upper-left corner of the screen to exit (close) these slides and return to the main presentation. Other browsers display a very small panel; left click the “Resume Slide Show” in that panel; you will be returned to the main presentation.

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3  What is our  underlying philosophy ?  How are we  vertically integrated ?  Bottom-up  Community –based / village-based  Value farmer knowledge, knowledge of place, traditional ecological knowledge.  Social action group created.  Holistic, participatory  Health, education, agriculture not separate functions, part of each other.  Local community empowered.  Farmer-driven.  Village chief and elders first level of involvement.  Village women’s association major role.  Vertical integration with local school system.  Coordinated with national ag research organization and host country university Gap Diagram

4  What do we know that works in these specific cultures?  To what do we need to pay attention? 4-Way Matrix

5  US / European business models  Electronics  Not physical, face-to-face communication  Not including the chief and elders in process  Written reports and record keeping Gap Diagram

6  Who are the actors with the Center?  IER, l’Institut d’Economie Rurale, Mali national agricultural research organization  IPR/IFRA, l’Institut Polytechnique Rurale et Institut Formation Recherches Appliquee, Mali national agricultural university  US universities  Tribal college (Montana) Actors and IncubatorsMontana externs

7  At time of design (2004)  At time of Launching (2007)  Now, at time of Hatching (2009)

8  IER, National Agricultural Research Organization of Mali  IPR/IFRA, National Agricultural University  ENI, National Engineering University  US Universities and Tribal College  Faculty  Students

9  Select 7 trainees  Begin English/graduate program  Obtain basic training in holistic / participatory / Farmer First process  Complete graduate program, village-based M.S. thesis  Launch Incubator Center / individual, village- based incubators

10 Mutualistic collaboration farmers, the Mali Incubator Center, US university faculty/students  Six incubators are in various stages of development and progressing toward “hatching” Mutualistic collaboration US / Malian Schools of Engineering - faculty/students, the Mali Agricultural Business Entrepreneurial Incubator Center Actors and Incubators

11  Certified Disease-Free Seed Potato Incubator  Sustainable Cooling System Incubator  Longterm Cowpea Storage Incubator  Malaria Handicrafts Incubator Malaria HandicraftsSeed PotatoCowpeas

12 BORKO SEED POTATOESSUSTAINABLE COOLER  2,000 farmers in seed potato production  5 Cool storage providers  20 providing transportation assistance  200,000 farmers in table potatoes  Faculty / students  Metalsmiths  Cool storage providers

13 COWPEA INCUBATOR MALARIA HANDICRAFT INCUBATOR  1,000 in Sanambele  5 entrepreneurs  23 women in Sanambele  1,000 potential persons receive benefit in village  Eventually 12 neighboring villages can receive benefit, ca. 12,000 persons.

14 COSTS TOTAL NUMBER FARMERS /OTHERS BENEFITTING  Training Center members Training $400,000 (USAID-HED); $99,000 (Montana State Univ.)  Launching University programs/Incubators $250,000 + $300,000 + $462,000  All of these funds were officially matched 1:1  Additional match has been documented.  Hatching, Self-Sufficiency proposal  202,000 X 6 = 1,212,000 Farmers/ Villagers or $2.20 per farmer/villager  200 new Malian university graduates  35 non-village entrepreneurs

15 BENEFITS TO INCUBATORS BENEFITS TO U.S. UNIVERSITIES  No cost expertise  Training  Lifetime collaborators  Support for the Quiet Revolution in International issues  Awards (campus-wide and national) to faculty and students at all partner universities and tribal college Discovery-based flow chart Mutualist DiagramMontana ExternsUST externs

16  Kenya, Khesara District, Bozeman Engineers without Borders  Pakistan schools for village girls and boys  Bangledesh Grameen Bank and other countries’ village-based, women-based microfinance systems

17  Lessons learned  What would we do differently next time?

18  Revenues coming in  Benefits to local businesses  Integration of research and development  How would we scale up?

19  Local ideas  Local issues  Local volunteers/entrepreneurs  Think holistically  Foreigners exit fast


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