The Australian story of farmer innovation in Conservation Agriculture reveals a complex interplay of policy, economics, science, and farming. Farmer experimentation with Conservation Agriculture began in the 1960's and has continued to this day where around 80%-90% of Australia's 23.5 million hectares of winter crops are now grown using Conservation Agriculture principles. This remarkable achievement is the result of both sustained investment in agricultural research and development and farmer innovation.
This brief discusses the emergence of Asia as a hotpot of innovation and the implications for Australia's own innovation capacity
The main challenge in Indonesia to an innovation-led approach to increasing farm productivity and farmers’ incomes is not due to a lack of good ideas by researchers but rather the lack of effective mechanisms making these ideas available and accessible to farmers.
The privatization of agricultural advisory and extension services in many countries and the associated pluralism of service providers has renewed interest in farmers’ use of fee-for-service advisors. Understanding farmers’ use of advisory services is important, given the role such services are expected to play in helping farmers address critical environmental and sustainability challenges. This paper aims to identify factors associated with farmers’ use of fee-for service advisors and bring fresh conceptualization to this topic.
The paper describes an attempt to improve the uptake of a new agricultural Decision Support System (aDSS). The approach was to design it with an understanding of the successes and failures of predecessors and of the changes in patterns of relevant technology use over time, the “usage context”. Even though its predecessor, IrriSatSMS, showed great potential in pilot seasons, that system failed to be commercialised successfully.
While privatization of extension has received considerable attention with respect to implications for public and private good, less consideration has been given to structural and relational implications for knowledge sharing.
The presentation was delivered to a conference entitled "Science Protecting Plant Health" in Brisbane on September 26th 2017 and then in private policy briefings to ACIAR (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research) and DAWR (Australian Government Department of Agriculture) in Australia. The presentation includes description of the role of the Tropical Agriculture Platform (TAP) and case study examples from CABI’s work to describe capacity building at the levels of individual, organisation and enabling environment.
Este articulo tiene como objetivo evaluar el entorno para la innovación en el estado de Zacatecas, para alcanzar este logro el estudio buscó recolectar la información secundaria necesaria para la identiciación de las cadenas productivas relevantes en el estado de Zacatecas. Así como caracterizar las cadenas prioritarias en su importancia socioeconómica y productiva, con el objeto de jerarquizarlas y también comparar la infomación obtenida para el año 2009 con la publicada en el 2004.
Este libro en cada uno de sus capítulos presenta un caso exitoso de tecnología generada y transferida por el INIFAP en el Norte Centro del país, resultado de proyectos que han transitado por diferentes estrategias de transferencia de tecnología.
El objetivo de la presente investigación fue analizar a través del tiempo el impacto de la intervención de la agencia de gestión de la innovación (AGI) en pequeños ovinocultores en el Estado de México. Se mapeó la red de 78 productores de ovinos en las delegaciones Atlacomulco y Jilotepec del Estado de México, durante tres momentos de observación: momento I, antes de la intervención (año 2007); Momento II, con la intervención (año 2009) y momento III, posterior a la intervención (año 2011)