Theme: Land and People
Land and People: Land productivity for sustainable livelihoods
Problem analysis
Despite gains in some places, there are still 1.2 billion
very poor people in the world. More than 800 million people do not have access
to adequate food to meet their needs, and food insecurity (the risk of
inadequate food, among other potential difficulties) is widespread. There is
little doubt that technologies can increase food production. However, many of
the rural poor live on fragile lands. In much of the tropics, poor information
and perverse incentives induce small-scale farmers to use farming methods that
lead to resource degradation and a downwards spiral of reduced productivity,
livelihood options, and land quality. Local action to improve the sustainability
of small farmers' livelihood options can be very effective, but it is
impractical for research organisations to devise and test the land management
and other options needed in every local context.
Potential solutions
Agroforestry is a key component to preventing and reversing
land degradation, and providing robust livelihood options for the rural poor.
First, we need to understand the basis for sound land management and quantify
the long-term consequences of management practices on small-scale agriculture.
Then locally relevant management options can be devised and tested through the
combining of robust principles with local ecological knowledge. Practical
schemes for monitoring land productivity and degradation will to pick up danger
signals, alerting policy makers at all levels to emerging land use problems. We
will work with policymakers at various levels to identify policy constraints to
sound land management and devise policies that are congruent with land
management principles.
Focus: Integrated soil fertility management for
improving rural livelihoods
This focus will identify the principles for using
agroforestry systems in the integrated soil fertility management strategies of
smallholder farming systems. First, we will develop an understanding of the
nature of soil fertility problems at different scales, and how they arise due to
biophysical processes and socio-economic circumstances. Trade-off analyses will
be undertaken to study the effect of agroforestry components in this context, as
well as long-term properties, and ability to generate welfare increases for
farmers. Institutional, policy, and capacity-building efforts will focus on
promoting awareness of soil fertility problems, causes, and opportunities for
solutions.
Focus: Soil and water conservation for maintaining
productive agricultural landscapes
The aim of this focus is to identify the principles for
integrating agroforestry into the soil and water conservation strategies. It is
already well understood that soil conservation is vital for maintenance of soil
fertility. The nature of the erosion problem in a landscape context will be
defined in order to compare agroforestry conservation methods to other methods.
Additional challenges in promoting adoption are seen in this focus as compared
to the soil fertility focus, because benefits from soil conservation investments
accrue over longer periods of time.
Focus: Vegetation management for increased system
productivity and reduced human vulnerability
This focus will identify the principles for integrating
agroforestry into agricultural land management systems for benefits other than
through the soil. Examples are microclimate regulation forestalling
desertification or providing shade for coffee and other crops, improved pest and
disease management through adding diversity, and preventing animal destruction
of vegetation through live fencing. Similar to the other foci, the work here
will focus on identifying major problems and prioritising the opportunities for
agroforestry to significantly increase productivity or buffer against risks.
Trade-off analysis will be a key activity of this focus, as integration of
agroforestry into other vegetative systems will induce many system dynamics.
There will be needs for institutional, policy, and capacity building in this
theme as well, but the potential for inducing conflict among stakeholders are
greater in this sub-theme than others, such as between herders and cultivators.
Focus: Land management interventions for reaching
the poorest land users
This focus recognizes and highlights the particular
difficulties that poor land users face in adopting improved land management
practices. These constraints involve poor access to technology development
processes and to agricultural information, poor bargaining power in markets and
for public services, and extreme household resource constraints. Thus, this
focus aims to develop participatory technology development processes so that
pro-poor technologies can be more readily adapted, to improve systems for
information flow, to improve adoption of known land management options, to
strengthen existing farmer groups to be able to increase their rewards from land
investments, and lastly to promote policy change that will enhance incentives
for improved land management by the poor. These are outputs that help
accelerated impact of the other three foci. Building partnerships for
development of learning centres will be an important activity in this focus, as
will action research in institutional innovation and policy research and
support.
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