La “innovación inclusiva”, es decir, la incorporación de distintos actores, incluyendo grandes y pequeños productores, en procesos de innovación y aprendizaje, representa uno de los grandes retos del sector palmero, y más allá, de la agricultura en Colombia. Este estudio presenta un marco teórico y práctico basado en tres elementos clave que refuerzan este debate. El primero se reiere a la importancia de la asociatividad y la conectividad entre pequeños productores y estos con organizaciones centrales en redes sociales dirigidas a lograr una acción coordinada.
Se propuso un procedimiento de gestión del conocimiento para la mejora en las cadenas de suministro de alimentos perecederos. Se realizó una revisión documental, observación detallada y entrevista a los trabajadores. Se efectuaron técnicas como: método de expertos, diagrama causa-efecto y análisis estadístico. Se identificaron las brechas de conocimientos de los pescadores en la empresa pesquera y se construyó el mapa de conocimiento del pescador.
This paper analyses intermediary organisations in developing economy agricultural clusters. The paper critically engages with a growing narrative in studies of intermediaries that have stressed the ownership structure of intermediaries as a key driver for enabling knowledge transfer, inter-firm learning and upgrading of small producers in clusters. Two case studies of Latin American clusters are presented and discussed.
The evidence base on agri-food systems is growing exponentially. The CoSAI-commissioned study, Mining the Gaps, applied artificial intelligence to mine more than 1.2 million publications for data, creating a clearer picture of what research has been conducted on small-scale farming and post-production systems from 2000 to the present, and where evidence gaps exist.
A range of approaches and financial instruments have been used to stimulate and support innovation in agriculture and resolve interlocking constraints for uptake at scale. These include innovation platforms, results-based payments, value chain approaches, grants and prizes, incubators, participatory work with farmer networks, and many more.
Innovation for sustainable agricultural intensification (SAI) is challenging. Changing agricultural systems at scale normally means working with partners at different levels to make changes in policies and social institutions, along with technical practices. This study extracts lessons for practitioners and investors in innovation in SAI, based on concrete examples, to guide future investment.
A huge increase in investment in innovation for agricultural systems is critical to meet the Sustainable Development Goals and Paris Climate Agreement. Most of this increase needs to come from reorienting existing funding for innovation. However, understanding whether an investment will fully promote environmentally sustainable and equitable agri-food systems can be difficult.
Finance is a key lever for turning agriculture from a potential source of environmental harm and social inequity to a driver of conservation and social inclusiveness. Private and public sector funding for farmers to combat climate change and protect and restore nature (‘Paying for Nature’) is rapidly increasing. Yet this new funding may not reach its aims without drastically improving farm-level reward mechanisms.