Objective
To evaluate drivers to agricultural innovation and diffusion
Study explores agricultural tech adoption in Cote dIvoire, Morocco, and Ethiopia, analyzing impacts on nutrition, health, livelihoods, and policy with SPIA, ESS, and World Bank partnerships. Aims to enhance data protocols and understand policy drivers
Ethiopia, Cote d’Ivoire, Morocco
Axis: Agrifood systems
Coordinating investigators:
– Tanguy BERNARD, BES, UB
– Kaleab BAYE, AAU
– Zineb Omary, UIR
– Thierry ZOUE, NAF, UFHB
Teams:
– Bordeaux School of Economics, UB, France
– Center for Food Science and Nutrition, AAU, Ethiopia
– School of Earth Sciences, AAU, Ethiopia
– Center for Global Studies, Université Internationale de Rabat, Maroc
– Center for rural sociology, Université Hassan II, Maroc
– Laboratoire de Biotechnologie, Agriculture et Valorisation des Ressources Biologiques, UFR Biosciences, UFHB, Côte d’Ivoire
– Centre ivoirien de Recherche Economique et Sociale (CIRES) and Cellule d’Analyse de Politiques Economiques du CIRES (CAPEC), Côte d’Ivoire
– University of Twente, Department of Earth Observation Science
– Plateforme Nationale Multisectorielle pour l’Information sur la Malnutrition, Côte d’Ivoire
– Research center for Inclusive Development in Africa (RIDA), Ethiopia
Funder: SPIA (CGIAR). Three country-level studies funded through independent call for propsals (Ethiopia, Côte d’Ivoire, Morocco)
Status: Submitted
To evaluate drivers to agricultural innovation and diffusion
In Cote d’Ivoire and Morocco, we will build on SPIA’s accumulated experience for stocktaking assessment of agricultural technologies and practices developed by CGIAR centers operating in the country. We will further propose a 20 years retrospective political science analyses of drivers and outcomes of policy decisions related to research and diffusion of agricultural innovations. In Ethiopia, we will build on current SPIA activities in partnership with ESS and World Bank LSMS/ISA teams. We will further seek to expand the analysis of agricultural innovations’ diffusion in three directions: (i) their effects on nutrition and health outcomes; (ii) their effects on changes in livelihoods, with a specific focus on pastoralism; and (iii) the making of research and diffusion-related policies. Through innovative measurement and related experiments (described below), we will strive to develop scalable data collection protocols that can be included in current surveys (e.g. LSMS/ISA) or that can easily be linked through time and geographic matching