IT'S NOT JUST THE TECHNOLOGY, IT'S THE SURROUNDING SYSTEM: HOW RESEARCHERS IN ECUADOR FOUND WAYS TO MAKE THEMSELVES USEFUL TO FARMERS THROUGH QUINOA AND LUPIN SEED SYSTEMS

Agriculture research often focuses on a technical problem. However, the most effective researchers usually intuit that this entry point is not sufficient to make themselves useful to farmers and nudge systems. Yet non-technical work frequently goes undocumented leaving many of the drivers of success...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental agriculture 2019-06, Vol.55 (S1), p.107-124
Hauptverfasser: MAZÓN, NELSON, PERALTA, EDUARDO, MURILLO, ÁNGEL, RIVERA, MARCO, GUZMÁN, ALFONSO, PICHAZACA, NICOLÁS, NICKLIN, CLAIRE
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container_end_page 124
container_issue S1
container_start_page 107
container_title Experimental agriculture
container_volume 55
creator MAZÓN, NELSON
PERALTA, EDUARDO
MURILLO, ÁNGEL
RIVERA, MARCO
GUZMÁN, ALFONSO
PICHAZACA, NICOLÁS
NICKLIN, CLAIRE
description Agriculture research often focuses on a technical problem. However, the most effective researchers usually intuit that this entry point is not sufficient to make themselves useful to farmers and nudge systems. Yet non-technical work frequently goes undocumented leaving many of the drivers of success unstudied. This paper attempts to understand the factors that contributed to the wide utilization of native crop varieties and species that were being promoted by the Ecuadorian National Agriculture Research Institution. The results show that what really made a difference in farmers' lives and the overall food system was increasing farmers' knowledge and capacity to produce quality seeds, promoting the consumption of these crops to national consumers, and linking farmers to outside groups. As a result, over a period of five years three case studies on three different farmer groups showed adoption rates of new varieties of between 20–50% and that they were able to produce approximately 7.5% of the annual demand for quinoa and lupin seed in Ecuador, from a starting point of virtually nothing. The research shows that the added value of a research institution might not be known at the beginning of the intervention, but rather will emerge over time through dialogue and negotiation based on systematic understanding of the context. Therefore, an appropriate stance for external organizations is to begin with an awareness of the existing assets of a specific farmer group and provide options that can be leveraged by local communities.
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subjects Agricultural research
Agriculture
Crops
Farmers
Hypotheses
Indigenous species
Innovations
Intellectual capital
Intervention
Knowledge management
Legumes
Local communities
Quinoa
R&D
Research & development
Research methodology
Seeds
Social capital
Sustainable development
title IT'S NOT JUST THE TECHNOLOGY, IT'S THE SURROUNDING SYSTEM: HOW RESEARCHERS IN ECUADOR FOUND WAYS TO MAKE THEMSELVES USEFUL TO FARMERS THROUGH QUINOA AND LUPIN SEED SYSTEMS
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