cross crp gender sites
TRANSCRIPT
Cross-CRP gender research sites
Patti KristjansonCCAFS Research Leader/Senior Scientist, World Agroforestry Center
Gender Investors MeetingParis June 15th
Implementing in Cross-CRP sites
Proposal: Identify key cross CRP-cutting gender issues and refine existing approaches to capture them
Implement the new research jointly with other CRP’s in landscapes/basins/hubs that have been identified as CRP research sites
Take a 10-year learning approach and catalyze the use of engagement, communication and capacity strengthening strategies by all partners aimed at enhancing the likelihood of achieving outcomes (particularly gender-related ones)
Implementing in Hubs, or Gender Sentinel Sites – W. Africa
CRP 1.1Drought tolerant,Water efficient crops/varieties/livestock breedsAgroforestryFeed managementCrop residue mgment
CRP 5Improved water,soil mgment
CCAFS/CRP7Seasonal weather forecastsClimate analoguesIndex insurance
Desired ImpactsIncreased livelihood resilience, improved food security, and enhanced environmental function
Changes In PracticesOne or more of the actor groups: use high
level scenario planning; use new or enhanced farming system technologies,
seeds and adaptation strategies; diversify livelihoods and diets; use new knowledge about inputs, finance, markets to change production, consumption and marketing
systems
Changes In Knowledge Attitudes And Skills
One or more of the actor groups have better understanding and/or skills in: the benefits and
value of new technologies and crop-livestock-tree systems; diversified livelihood and nutrition
sources, ecosystem function; land, water and biodiversity management, implications of climate change and adaptation measures, community involvement; how to work in
partnership across scales and sectors in an adaptive & problem-oriented way
e.g. Mali Actor groups: NARES (IER), NGO’s (SahelEco, AMEDD, TreeAid, others), local women’s groups, local authorities
e.g. Mali Actor groups: NARES (IER), NGO’s (SahelEco, AMEDD, TreeAid, others), local women’s groups, local authorities
OUTCOMESOUTCOMES
Implementing in Hubs, or Gender Sentinel Sites – e.g. Khulna Hub, Bangladesh
Improved rice & shrimp varieties & mgment
Improved land, water mgment
Climate services,Insurance, seed banks
IFPRI: markets, institutions, policiesWEAI;Biofortification, home gardens
Local partners:BRAC, SAVE,
SW Bangladesh ‘Khulna Hub’Theory of Change/Outcome logic
CRP2New inst’l
arrangements, policies, credit,
markets
CRP3/CSISANew rice
varieties & suitable aqua.
species & mgment practices
CRP4Improved
homestead production
systems, diverse diets
CCAFS/CRP7Improved climate services, climate
and women-smart ag practices,
insuranceSeed/food banks
EXTENSIONISTS <>FARMER COMMUNITIES<>SEED SECTOR PLAYERS<>NGOs<>MICROFINANCE AGENCIES<>WATER MANAGEMENT AUTHORITIES<><>POLICY MAKERs<>CGIAR
RESEARCHERS<>NARS<>WOMENS GROUPS<>DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
CHANGES IN KNOWLEDGE ATTITUDES AND SKILLSOne or more of the actor groups have better understanding and/or skills in: the benefits and value of new technologies and
crop/fish varieties; implications of different land use plans, the impacts of external drivers of change on water resources; community involvement in water mgment; how to work in partnership across scales and sectors in an adaptive & problem-
oriented way
CHANGES IN PRACTICESOne or more of the actor groups: use high level scenario planning; use tools and effective water governance strategies;
improve planning of water infrastructure; use new farm-level technologies, seeds and adaptation strategies; private sector involvement in the agriculture sector including information, finance, markets and inputs;
Reduce poverty, improve food security and strengthen livelihood resilience in coastal areas through improved water infrastructure , governance and
management, and more productive and diversified farm system
OUTPUTS
OUTCOMES
IMPACT
ACTOR
CRP5Improved water governance & management
Kisumu/Nyando Basin (western Kenya)Economics of Biochar (Cornell)MICCA – East African Dairy Development (FAO, ICRAF, ILRI, KARI, private sector partners)COMART Community-led assets/value chains CARE – carbon payments to smallholdersICRAF – GHG measurement in complex landscapesVi Agroforestry – SLM, carbon paymentsCCAFS Participatory Action Research – with ILRI, Vi, World Neighbours, CBOs, Min of Ag, Min of LS, KARI: training, K sharing, etc in range of improved SWLMCIAT-TSBF - legumes and N-fixation through the legume Africa networkCIMMYT/KARI - Insect and Striga resistant and drought tolerant Maize
Lake VictoriaCCAFS Baseline siteCARE, PAR
Yellow squares: 10x10km2 ICRAF long-run soils research blocks
CCAFS & CRP5 (land & water): integrating socioeconomic and biophysical information to help achieve outcome of improved SWLM actions on the ground!