The document summarizes experiences from the African Forum for Agricultural Advisory Services (AFAAS). It discusses how agricultural extension and advisory services (AEAS) in Africa have evolved from a traditional focus on technology transfer to facilitating innovation systems and supporting farmers' organizations. It outlines challenges faced by national AEAS and reforms underway, such as decentralization and pluralism. The document also reviews evidence that extension can significantly and positively impact knowledge, adoption and productivity when effective policies support well-organized extension systems. Finally, it provides examples of AFAAS's work strengthening country forums and networks and building partnerships around advisory services in Africa.
Human Factors of XR: Using Human Factors to Design XR Systems
Agricultural Advisory Services Forum Africa
1. African Forum for Agricultural
Advisory Services
6TH AFRICA AGRICULTURE SCIENCE WEEK & FARA GENERAL
ASSEMBLY
Dr. Silim M. Nahdy – Executive Director
18 July 2013
Accra International Conference Centre –Accra Ghana
www.afaas-africa.org
EXPERIENCES FROM AFAAS
2. 1. AEAS in Context
Three-quarters of the world's poorest billion
people live in rural areas
– Depend on agriculture for their livelihoods
Rural poverty linked to untransformed
agriculture
4. AEAS in Context ….
• AEAS are front line actors in upscaling KIT and
agr. innovations
• AEAS therefore play a significant role in;
– increased agric. productivity,
– agricultural transformation,
– improving food and nutrition security, and
– ultimately reducing poverty
YET AEAS is inadequately emphasized and
funded
5. 2. National AEAS
Originally extension conceived as a
service to “extend” research-based
knowledge to rural sector to improve
their livelihoods;
–Traditional - focus on increasing
production, improving yields, training
farmers, and transferring technology
7. Broad Challenges …….
• Global developments affecting EAS:
– globalization
– market liberalization and market focus
– privatization
– decentralization and devolution
– natural and man-made disasters
– rural poverty and food insecurity
– climate change
– Use of ICT
– HIV/AIDS epidemic
8. Generic Challenges in the Governmental
Extension (Public)
• Weak/inadequate Policies
• Role conflict
• Inappropriate legal setup and structure
• Top down messages and quality control
• Finance by budgets (input), not linked to tasks and
outputs
• Inappropriate content & blanket recommendations
• Lack of efficiency and inadequate flexibility in a
learning environment
• Capacity and inappropriate training
9. 3. Refocusing AEAS
• AES roles evolving in wake of Challenges ……
• Key transformation and reforms embeds AES
in the value chain and innovation systems.
• National AEAS in Developing Countries
undergone major changes in the past two
decades ……
– And continues to evolve based on
context
10. Refocusing AEAS…
AES re-defined
– Originally conceived as a service to
“extend” research-based knowledge to
improve the lives of rural farmers
– Now goes beyond technology transfer
to facilitation; beyond training to
education, and includes assisting farmer
groups to form and organize, dealing
with marketing and financial issues, and
partnering with a broad range of service
providers and other agencies
11. PRODUCT INNOVATION PROCESS INNOVATION
• Building social
capital: Helping
men and women
farmers organize into
producer groups to
increase market access
& other needed services
• Achieving Long-
term food security
by using sustainable
land, soil, water &
other NRM practices
• Increasing farm-
household income by
helping small-scale
men and women
farmers learn how
to produce and
market high-
value food
products
• To achieve national
food security the
primary target group
will continue to be
small-scale male
farmers since they
produce these
crops in most
countries
Technology
transfer, especi
ally for the
staple food
crops
Training
farmers how to
intensify &
diversify their
farming
systems
Training
farmers how to
organize into
producer and
self-help
groups
Training
farmers how to
use sustainable
NRM practices
Training rural women how
to improve family nutrition
and use improved family
planning, hygiene and
health care practices
Improving Rural LivelihoodsMaintaining National Food Security
PRODUCT INNOVATION PROCESS INNOVATION
Refocusing …Comprehensive Agricultural Extension System
12. 5. Status and Reforms in AEAS in Developing
Countries
AEAS weak , mainly due to many years of public
neglect. However;
• Reforms are being undertaken;
– Policies, strategies, institutions, methodologies, tools
• Use of several models for different situations
• New approaches emerging based on
experimentation, learning, and adaptation
• Partnerships for varied skills and competencies
emerging
13. Status and Reforms……
Reforms include use of
• pluralism in service delivery
• decentralization/devolution,
• privatization, contracting in and out,
• cost-sharing, fee-for service
• demand-driven/participatory approaches,
• use of ICTs
• accountability to farmers who have role AES
performance
• Innovations systems approach
14. Status of reforms ……
Reforms and CAADP Pillar iv - FAAP
• The Framework for African Agricultural
Productivity, (FAAP) – Pillar IV of CAADP provides
above as some of key principles to guide the reforms.
• Although many SSA countries, in paper, are
committed to the reforms, how that takes
place, however, is another matter.
15. Examples of Country Reforms
• Ethiopia: Public agricultural extension system
• Ghana: Early adopter of liberalization, pluralism and
privatization policies for extension services
• Kenya: Pluralistic extension and demand driven
• Malawi: Towards Pluralistic Demand Driven Services
• Mozambique: Pluralistic and demand driven
extension system
• Rwanda: Developing a local service provider
capacity
• Tanzania: Decentralized pluralist market-oriented
research and extension system
• Uganda- Pluralistic Advisory Services, Private Public
Partnerships driven –
16. 6. Evidence for Successes and Failures of
Extension Models
• In general, extension shown to have
significant and positive effects on
knowledge, adoption, and productivity.
• A review of 48 studies of extension found the
majority (36) had significantly positive results.
• Studies of rates of return, generally, showed
very high numbers (between 13-500%).
• Highest payoffs in developing countries .
17. 7. Agricultural Extension and Advisory
Service policies
• A major problem of organizing AEAS in
developing countries is absence of legal and
policy frameworks for providing the service
• A sound agricultural policy is indispensable
to guide the key players involved in AEAS
18. Forms of AEAS Policy
• Decrees and Proclamation
• Provisional Extension Policies
• Legislated extension policy
It is important to note that countries that have
enacted extension policy through legislative action
tend to have well-organized, financially stable
extension systems that have sustained effectiveness
and a cumulative impact (Hanyani-Mlambo, 2000).
19. Forms of AEAS Policy Contd………..
• Decrees and proclamations: These are policies issued
by the head of state which does not go through the
process of consultation and debate involving various
stakeholders and beneficiaries
• Provisional Extension Policies: This is the most common
form of extension policy in most developing countries.
In the absence of more formalized extension policies, or
at the time when the formally enacted policy has been
suspended, a provisional or ad hoc policy comes into
play
• Legislated extension policies are embodied by the
country’s highest law-making authority (e.g., congress
or parliament). Countries that have enacted extension
policy through legislative action tend to have well-
organized, financially stable extension systems that
have sustained effectiveness and a cumulative impact
20. 8. Key undertakings
• AFAAS engagement in CAADP agenda
– Science Agenda for African Agriculture ;
– Capacity Strengthening in Post-Conflict & Protracted Crises
Countries
– Guidelines of integrating AEAS in CAADP
– Tropical Agricultural platform
21. Information & Knowledge Management
• Three Symposia organised; Third symposium co- organised
with FARA
• A website, & a virtual social networking platform;
• A conceptual framework for lesson learning developed;
• A guide for Piloting Market Oriented AAS;
• Study on targeting Women Advisory Service Providers in
Capacity Development Programmes;
• Study on how issues of Climate Change are being
addressed in AAS
• Capacity building for CIKM facilitators
• EAS Policy dialogue and support –
Sudan/S, Liberia, Zimbabwe, Uganda, DRC.
22. Establishing and Supporting
Country Fora
• AFAAS membership 37 African Countries
• Country Fora are a backbone of AFAAS
• Supporting AEAS Country Fora
SDC Support in Benin and Ethiopia- Good Progress
and continued mentorship
GFRAS – BMGF : Kenya, Rwanda, South
Sudan, Uganda ; also Botswana and Mozambique
IFAD Support - Burkina
Faso, Malawi, Mozambique, Sierra Leone and
Uganda
MDTF - More countries will be supported
23. Linkages and Partnerships
• GFRAS- Global Forum for Rural Advisory Services
• FARA
• SROs; ASARECA- MoU signed and CORAF, CCARDESA to be
formalized
• NRI- Natural Resources Institute - climate change Learning
• CABI International- Plantwise ( Plant Clinics)
• Icipe- up and out scaling innovations and technologies
• Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) –
climate change esp. adaptation and capacity of community
works
• Joint projects formulation with universities and SCOs
24. Linkages and Partnerships… contd
• Helvetas , FANRPAN, Agridea International – Post Harvest
Management Project for SSA( Mozambique and Benin) – on
going
• INNODEV- Knowledge Management component
• COMPACI- Competitive Africa Cotton Initiative
• TEAM- Africa -Tertiary Education in Agriculture Mechanisms
• RUFORUM
• NAFE
• KIT- Royal Tropical Institute on MOAAS
• CTA- on Knowledge Management - discussions