1. Global strategies
  2. Conducting agricultural research

Conducting agricultural research

  • Carrying out agricultural research
  • Improving agricultural research
  • Developing agricultural research
  • Exploring new agricultural products
  • Developing international agricultural research

Description

Conducting agricultural research involves systematically investigating crop, livestock, and resource management practices to develop innovative solutions that increase productivity, sustainability, and resilience. This strategy addresses challenges such as food insecurity, pest outbreaks, and environmental degradation by generating evidence-based recommendations, improved technologies, and adaptive methods. Its practical intent is to remedy agricultural inefficiencies and vulnerabilities, ensuring food systems are more robust, resource-efficient, and capable of meeting current and future demands.This information has been generated by artificial intelligence.

Context

This strategy features in the framework of Agenda 21 as formulated at UNCED (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), now coordinated by the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development and implemented through national and local authorities. Agenda 21 recommends establishing or strengthening government and international institution responsibility for agricultural resource survey, management and development.

Implementation

Current national research and development expenditure by developing countries is approaching US$ 5,000 million a year, and international expenditure is about US$ 350 million.

Established in 1971, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) is an informal association of 40 public and private sector donors that supports a network of 17 international agricultural research centres. The mission of the CGIAR is, through international research and related activities, and in partnership with national research systems, to contribute to sustainable improvements in the productivity of agriculture, forestry, and fisheries in developing countries in ways that enhance nutrition and well-being, especially among low income people. Over 1,800 scientists representing 60 different nationalities conduct research at the 17 CGIAR centres or in some 40 developing countries where they are posted to work with developing country partners. Their approach is interdisciplinary and their orientation is towards problem solving. Total contributions in 1992 were about $314 million.

Claim

Governments at the appropriate level, with the support of the relevant international and regional organizations, should strengthen research on agricultural production systems in areas with different endowments and agro-ecological zones, including comparative analysis of the intensification, diversification and different levels of external and internal inputs.

 

Agricultural Research should be directed to develop on-farm genetic diversification projects and other alternatives to industrial production at least as actively as they invest in genetic engineering. All agricultural research should be devoted to food security instead of corporate marketing strategies.

Broader

Improving
Yet to rate

Narrower

Studying bees
Presentable

Constrained by

Facilitates

Facilitated by

Related

Problem

Reference

Web link

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero Hunger

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
1A4N
Q0489
DOCID
12704890
D7NID
196802
Editing link
Official link
Last update
Sep 29, 2022