Transdisciplinary innovation in irrigated smallholder agriculture in africa

Jochen Froebrich*, Eva Ludi, Sami Bouarfa, Dominique Rollin, Nebo Jovanovic, Maria Roble, Tarek Ajmi, Rami Albasha, Sékou Bah, Haithem Bahri, Gonzalo Barberá, Christy van Beek, Bruno Cheviron, Benson Chishala, Willem de Clercq, Yacouba Coulibaly, Mohammed Dicko, Bandiougou Diawara, Aleksandra Dolinska, Raphaëlle DucrotTeklu Erkossa, Sebastiao Famba, Degol Fissahaye, Angel De Miguel Garcia, Solomon Habtu, Salia Hanafi, Julia Harper, Hanneke Heesmans, Jean Yves Jamin, Kees van't Klooster, Nathaniel Mason, Jean Claude Mailhol, Serge Marlet, Insaf Mekki, Constansia Musvoto, Beatrice Mosello, Alice Mweetwa, Naomi Oates, Elijah Phiri, Ludivine Pradeleix, Erik Querner, Andrei Rozanov, Philippe Ker Rault, Jean Emmanuel Rougier, Chizumba Shepande, Maite Sánchez Reparaz, Bréhima Tangara, Joris De Vente, Marlene de Witt, Cai Xueliang, Abdelaziz Zairi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Boosting the productivity of smallholder farming systems continues to be a major need in Africa. Challenges relating to how to improve irrigation are multi-factor and multisectoral, and they involve a broad range of actors who must interact to reach decisions collectively. We provide a systematic reflection on findings from the research project EAU4Food, which adopted a transdisciplinary approach to irrigation for food security research in five case studies in Ethiopia, Mali, Mozambique, South Africa and Tunisia. The EAU4Food experiences emphasize that actual innovation at irrigated smallholder farm level remains limited without sufficient improvement of the enabling environment and taking note of the wider political economy environment. Most project partners felt at the end of the project that the transdisciplinary approach has indeed enriched the research process by providing different and multiple insights from actors outside the academic field. Local capacity to facilitate transdisciplinary research and engagement with practitioners was developed and could support the continuation and scaling up of the approach. Future projects may benefit from a longer time frame to allow for deeper exchange of lessons learned among different stakeholders and a dedicated effort to analyse possible improvements of the enabling environment from the beginning of the research process.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6-22
JournalIrrigation and Drainage
Volume69
Issue numberS1
Early online date30 Jan 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2020

Keywords

  • participatory innovation
  • smallholder farming, irrigation
  • transdisciplinary approach

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