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Farmers
of the Future Initiative
Through
the Farmers of the Future initiative, the World Agroforestry Centre
(ICRAF) and its partners are facilitating and contributing
to the integration of agroforestry and natural resource management
into basic education.
1.
The situation
Around
the world, an estimated 130 million children are out of school and
about 160 million children are undernourished. The basic education
children get does not provide them with needed life skills and is
poorly adapted to their needs and those of local communities. Youths
often have a negative attitude towards agriculture and rural life
and are poorly prepared to take on farming in a productive and sustainable
way yet a large majority of them end up as farmers and petty traders
of agricultural products.
2.
Background
Food and Education for All
Two major commitments have been made by the majority of the worlds
governments to ensure the basic right of all children to education
and food, as enshrined in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. These commitments are:
- to enable all children to have access to quality basic education
(Education for All) by the year 2015
- to reduce by half the number of undernourished people (Food
for All) by the year 2015
These two commitments are yielding good progress
already. The number of children who do not attend school is declining
in many countries. The number of undernourished children and adults
is falling, globally. The challenges facing the achievement of Education
for All are enormous, however, especially in rural areas where low
participation, high drop-out rates and under-education are still
common.
Linking education and sustainable
resource management
Fortunately there is considerable hope, even though the challenges
are great. Research has provided strong evidence that basic education
makes a direct contribution to the reduction of poverty in rural
areas. A minimum of 4 years of basic education, which addresses
literacy and numeracy as well as science and possibly agricultural
education, can lead to an increase in agricultural productivity
by up to 8%. Coupled with this relationship is the important factor
that families who raise themselves out of poverty and achieve a
sustainable livelihood are in a better position to support their
children to attend school, thus adding momentum to the process of
change and development.
Although the close relationships between poverty,
lack of food and absence of education have long been recognised
and understood, development strategies at international and national
level have tended to treat equitable access to quality education
and food as separate issues. There is a real lack of information
and experience sharing about the realities of basic education and
schooling in rural locations in specific countries. The endemic
problems of education access and quality in rural areas need to
be recognised, understood and addressed through coherent, explicit
policies and strategies. Support and capacity building is needed
for institutions engaged in basic education in rural areas, for
human resource development, and for collaborative learning and action
between different stakeholders. It is no longer acceptable for these
conditions to be maintained; action is now vital. Practical means
are required to ensure that the rhetoric of these global frameworks
becomes reality.
Agroforestry as an interface
It is timely and essential to explore and implement practical and
innovative measures in which the related issues of education and
food in rural areas can be tackled together. The existence of global
frameworks in which issues of Education for All and Food for All
can be addressed provides an enabling environment for integration
of innovation and action.
Agroforestry has the potential to impact on food
security and basic education at the same time. While contributing
to food security and health and nutrition, agroforestry also offers
unique opportunities to enhance the quality and relevance of education.
Indeed, thanks to the multidisciplinarity of agroforestry, scientific,
social, economical, political and cultural aspects can be integrated
into different learning subjects and help the integration of disciplines.
This can lead to a more effective application of what has been learned
and give a practical touch to theory, thus enhancing the quality
and relevance of education.
Agroforestry can also provide some food and income for schools,
e.g. through the selling of seedlings from a school nursery. The
profits of such activities can then be used to buy books or other
materials. In addition, agroforestry activities in schools offer
great opportunities for community outreach.
Characteristics
& Approach
Training &
Research
For
more information on Farmers of the Future project, contact Tom Vandenbosch,
Farmers of the Future Project (t.vandenbosch@cgiar.org).
World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), PO Box 30677, 00100 GPO,
Nairobi, Kenya. Telephone: +254 20 7224000 or +1 650 833 6645, Fax:
+254 20 7224023 or +1 650 833 6646.
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