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‘Miracle seeds,’ informational curses? The risk of high expectations for new agricultural technologies

Jul 2nd, 2023 • by CAROLINE MIEHE, LEOCARDIA NABWIRE, ROBERT SPARROW, DAVID SPIELMAN, AND BJORN VAN CAMPENHOUT

Over the next few decades, farmers in sub-Saharan Africa will need to produce more food on less land and under increasingly difficult climatic conditions. The use of climate-smart agricultural practices and improved technologies such as higher-yielding and drought-tolerant crop varieties are thought to be at least part of the solution. Unfortunately, concerns are rising that the use of improved inputs and technologies across the region now seems to be stagnating—or at least advancing at a slower pace than required.

How to Increase Gender Equity in Agriculture: New Evidence from Malabo Montpelier Forum

Jun 17th, 2023 • by S. Gustafson

The twelfth annual Malabo Montpelier Forum was held on June 8 and centered on a new report from the Malabo Montpelier Panel: Bridging the Gap: Policy Innovations to Put Women at the Center of Food System Transformation in Africa. According to the report, nearly two-thirds of African women play a role in the region’s agrifood system.

Adding Value to Ethiopia's Coffee Sector

Feb 16th, 2023 • by S. Gustafson

Coffee plays a central role in Ethiopia’s economic structure. An estimated 15 million Ethiopians depend on the coffee sector for their livelihoods, and the country remains the largest producer and exporter of coffee in Africa. Despite the importance of the crop for income generation and economic growth, however, only a small proportion of Ethiopian coffee farmers engage in practices that can result in higher quality beans and garner higher prices on the international market.

Policy seminar: Leveraging Kenya’s new Bottom-Up Economic Plan for food system transformation

Feb 1st, 2023 • by JUNEWEENEX MBUTHIA AND LENSA OMUNE

Kenya’s new government has developed an ambitious Bottom-Up Economic Plan to tackle complex domestic and global challenges. “The Bottom-Up approach is about making sure that markets work, and more importantly, work for the poor,” Cabinet Secretary Prof. Njuguna Ndung’u explained during a recent policy seminar hosted by the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA) and IFPRI Kenya as part of the CGIAR Research Initiative on National Policies and Strategies (NPS) seminar series.