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Information Management for Agricultural Innovation

Information Management for Agricultural Innovation. Ajit Maru GFAR Secretariat. Outline. Agriculture Development, Knowledge and Innovation and GFAR’s Role Understanding Agricultural Innovation and Agricultural Innovation Systems

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Information Management for Agricultural Innovation

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  1. Information Management for Agricultural Innovation Ajit Maru GFAR Secretariat

  2. Outline • Agriculture Development, Knowledge and Innovation and GFAR’s Role • Understanding Agricultural Innovation and Agricultural Innovation Systems • Enabling Information and Knowledge Systems for Agricultural Innovation • Examples of Information and Knowledge Systems that contribute to Agricultural Innovation • Strategy and Interventions by ARD Stakeholders

  3. Agricultural Development, Knowledge and Innovation Agricultural development depends to a great extent on how successfully knowledge is generated, shared and applied....for innovation.

  4. GFAR’s role The Global Forum on Agricultural Research has emphasized the need for all ARD stakeholders to enable agricultural innovation systems and promote agricultural innovation for development.

  5. Key Question How can we, as NARS leaders and information systems managers, contribute to enabling of (information and) knowledge systems that support agricultural innovation systems and contribute to agricultural innovation?

  6. Understanding Innovation Innovation is a process of generating, accessing and putting knowledge into use. The determinants of innovation are the interactions of different people and their ideas and the social setting of these interactions and relations.

  7. Agricultural Innovation Agricultural innovation is different than research. “It is not a linear process of research institutes being creators of knowledge and technology, extension as its diffuser and farmers as adopters”.

  8. Input provider Processor Consumer Producer Market Intermediary Agricultural Innovation Agriculture innovation can occur at any node, such as Producer or Processor, in a Value Addition / Supply / Market Chain activity:

  9. Defining “Agricultural Innovation Systems” Defining an Agricultural Innovation System (AIS) is still difficult; more so in the context of small holder producers of the South.

  10. Defining “Agricultural Innovation Systems” • In Industry or the Services sectors, agricultural innovation systems are based on: • The “Silicon Valley” model where scientific and technological institutions drive innovation and are part of the system • The “Cathedral” or “Microsoft Windows” model where private sector drives innovation • The “Bazaar” or “Open Source/Linux” model where a community participates innovation

  11. Defining “Agricultural Innovation Systems” • In Agriculture? Distinction emerging between North with more developed, Industrialized agriculture and the South, largely small holder producer, resource poor based agriculture. The North has “Silicon Valley” and “Cathedral” Models with emergence of new knowledge intermediaries .

  12. Defining “Agricultural Innovation Systems” • In agriculture of the South, development of agricultural innovation systems may be: • Driven by the public sector through the NARS • Driven by the private sector and in partnership with the public sector NARS • Driven by the “agricultural” community

  13. Defining “Agricultural Innovation Systems” In my opinion, all three models will operate simultaneously so we have to continue to strengthen information management for the NARS but also address the demands for information and knowledge of the “agricultural community” to enable innovation”.

  14. Innovation Systems Thinking Innovation systems thinking recognizes that innovation and change can originate and be catalyzed anywhere in the network in an activity and that relations among the actors are key to knowledge sharing and application.

  15. Innovation Systems Thinking Innovation processes can be enhanced by creating more possibilities for actors to interact. This is the core determinant for starting information support for agricultural innovation.

  16. Innovation Systems Thinking In innovation systems, information and knowledge is usually shared across a community bound by common needs, interests, values etc and not by “scientific disciplines” or “professions”.

  17. Parameters for Developing Information and Knowledge Systems for innovation • Actors • Information Needs of the actors • Information Sources for the actors • Information Flows between the actors • Services that can satisfy the actor’s information needs • Technology for the Services

  18. Actors in Agricultural Innovation Input provider Processor Consumer Producer Market Intermediary

  19. Information Needs for Agricultural Innovation Information needs of innovators in agriculture are complex and driven by the need to be competitive: reduce cost, time in production or processing, improve quality and/or reduce human pain and risk. The information needs for innovation are now related to participation in markets, how others are solving similar problems and awareness about available solutions.

  20. Information Sources There are several sources of information for actors in agricultural innovation. They provide Market related information and “know how”. The sources for “know where” and “know who” however is weak.

  21. Information Sources In many instances, information producers are themselves also consumers of information (Prosumers). New “Guilds” or organization of groups of actors in the agricultural value addition chain are emerging as providers of information and knowledge, for example seed, fertilizer and pesticide suppliers, market intermediaries and producer organizations. We must promote, support and add value to these groups in their ICM and KM activities

  22. Information Flow in Agricultural Innovation System Information flows in an Innovation System are as in a network. They are complex.

  23. The role of ICT With use of ICTs there are no geographic limitations to sharing of information and knowledge.

  24. Services and Technology • Question and Answer (Q&A) Services through use of Telephony, Internet and Digital means • Online Social Networks • Electronic Discussions • Community of Practices • Wikis • Blogs

  25. Services and Technology • Information repositories including databases and value added services such as for forecasts on weather, prices, transportation, consumer preferences etc • Advanced Search Engines • Knowledge based services through knowledge intermediaries • Learning opportunities at Community and Individual level

  26. Examples • Q&A Services Aaqua:http://aaqua.persistent.co.in/aaqua/forum/index

  27. Examples Q &A Services.. Cont’d • Rice Doctor http://www.knowledgebank.irri.org/RiceDoctor/default.htm • Ask FAO http://www.fao.org/askfao/home.do • FAO’s Technology for Agriculture (TECA) http://www.fao.org/sd/teca/

  28. Examples • Wikis • Wikipedia: Agropedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Agropedia • India / Indian Institute of Technology http://opaals.iitk.ac.in/agropedia/ • Japan / JIRCAS http://rms1.agsearch.agropedia.affrc.go.jp/menu_en.html • RUN Network and Kitabu

  29. Examples • Community of Practice of Farmers • Mentored by Rural Development Agency, Republic of Korea • L3Farmers: Life Long Learning for Farmers, Learning Opportunities using ICT enabled Information Systems for Agricultural Communities in several Commonwealth Countries

  30. What should be our Strategy? Our strategy should be to enable these services through agricultural development stakeholders including the farmer organizations, community based organizations, non-government organizations, private sector, research and education institutions rather than to develop them through the public sector “NARS” Institutions.

  31. New Institutional Frameworks • We also need: • New Institutional Frameworks • How to support these new information and knowledge services for agricultural innovation? • Public Sector support ? • Community based support ? • Private Sector Support? • Partnerships between Sectors?

  32. New Institutional Frameworks • We also need: • New Institutional Frameworks • How to tackle issues of “Intellectual Property” on knowledge generated through a community • How to enable greater coherence in information flows related to agriculture and its development • How to create “Learning Opportunities” that enable knowledge access equitably in a community and globally

  33. New Capacities • We also need new capacities such as in: • Using new information technologies and tools to support ICM and KM for AIS • Generating and managing information and knowledge objects • Enabling and promoting ICT enabled social networks • Creating and supporting learning opportunities

  34. What can GFAR do? • Create Awareness and Advocate how ICTs, information and knowledge systems can enable AIS and contribute to agricultural innovation. • Strengthen the capacities of its stakeholder groups in ICM and KM to contribute to development of AIS.

  35. What can GFAR do? • Contribute to development of robust Institutional Frameworks for supporting agricultural innovation through coherence and governance • Information Management Standards, Norms etc. • Identifying and propagating appropriate information management tools and applications • Governance structures for information and knowledge sharing

  36. What is GFAR doing ? • GFAR’s stakeholders activities • IISAST (CABI,CGIAR, CTA, FAO, GFAR, IAALD, SIST, WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITY) • Advocacy • Information Management • Standards and Norms • Tools and Applications • Capacity Development

  37. What is GFAR doing? • EGFAR • Gateway and Node for information on critical issues of ARD • The re-engineered EGFAR as a Model Webspace and Platform for Regional and NAR Information Systems • My EGFAR • Electronic Repository Forum with a GFAR ARD Ontology and Integration with AGRIS • Integration of databases on ARD Institutions, Experts and Projects • Integration of databases on ARD stakeholders

  38. ARD Webring

  39. Thank You

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