El Plan Estratégico de la Cadena Florícola del Paraguay, busca proveer de una herramienta estratégica que guíe la priorización e implementación de las actividades a realizar durante el lapso de 5 años, en función de la visión compartida por los actores de la cadena florícola del Paraguay.
La presente publicación constituye una contribución para visualizar un modelo conceptual por el cual los segmentos de población urgidos de acceso a oportunidades de desarrollo, sustentabilidad e inclusión social en los territorios rurales de la america latina y del caribe, se beneficiarían con una o varias soluciones de innovación en la cadena de valor de bioqueroseno.
El PEP-ARROZ se constituye en una “carta de navegación” u “hoja de ruta”, con las orientaciones estratégicas para mejorar la competitividad de la cadena de arroz, a fin de establecer prioridades, definir acciones, negociar y asignar recursos y tomar decisiones.
En el proyecto se han analizado el eslabonamiento de la producción primaria con la producción agroindustrial, a fin de definir una estrategia de diversificación horizontal y valor agregado para penetrar a nichos específicos de buenos precios en el mercado internacional, focalizada en la consistencia de la calidad, confianza y garantía en las exportaciones. Con ese propósito se ha estructurado dos sub-áreas: a) Políticas de Beneficiado e Industrialización; y b) Políticas de Comercialización y Promoción Interna, cada una con objetivos específicos, acciones y medidas de política. 34.
This working paper provides the following text as a abstract:
Smallholders in Asia and Africa are affected by increasingly complex national and global ecological and economic changes. Agricultural innovation and technology shifts are critical among these forces of change and integration with services is increasingly facilitated through innovations in institutions. Here the authors focused mainly on innovation opportunities for small farmers, with a particular emphasis on marginalized small farm communities. The chapter elaborates on the concept of the ‘small farm’ and offers a synthesis of the findings of all the chapters in this volume.
This publication is based on invited papers presented at the conference "Agricultural Biotechnology in Developing Countries: Towards Optimizing the Benefits for the Poor", held in November 1999 at the Center for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn. The conference was convened in collaboration with the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA), Hoechst Schering AgrEvo GmbH (now Aventis CropScience) and the German Foundation for International Development (Deutsche Stiftung fUr internationale Entwicldung - DSE).
It is now widely acknowledged that biotechnology will have significant implications for development. While biotechnology’s potential for low income economies is still the subject of controversy, this paper argues that it is precisely in these countries that food and agriculture related biotechnology could efficiently contribute to the achievement of development objectives. To date, however, biotechnological advances have been realized predominantly in industrialized countries.
Innovations are fast changing the agricultural landscape driven by the increasing need to shift towards sustainable practices without sacrificing the productivity and profitability of farming. Innovations in technology, institutions, processes, and products have contributed to the growth of agriculture, globally and in developing countries including India and Africa, as observed in the cases of green revolution in cereals; and gene revolution in cotton.
To achieve food security for all, new resource policies for sustainable land and water use are needed. Land, water and energy need to be considered jointly in policies, not in isolation.