International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for
Development (IAASTD)
Latin America and the
Summary for Decision Makers
Authors: Inge Armbrecht (Colombia),
Hugo Cetrángolo (Argentina), Tirso Gonzales (Peru), Ivette Perfecto (Puerto
Rico)
Declaration of Governments
In the view of all the countries, the Reports make a valuable and
important contribution to our understanding of knowledge, science, and
technology for development, based on recognition of the need to deepen our
understanding of the challenges that lie ahead.
This assessment is a constructive exercise and makes an important
contribution that all countries need to develop further in order to ensure that
agricultural knowledge, science, and technology achieve their potential, with a
view to attaining the goals of development and sustainable poverty and hunger
reduction, thereby improving the quality of rural life and human health and
facilitating equitable development in a way that is socially, economically, and
environmentally sustainable.
Based on this declaration, the following governments approve the Summary
for Decision Makers in Latin America and the Caribbean:
Belize, Brazil, Costa Rica,
Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, and Uruguay
Background
In August 2002, the World Bank and
the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations initiated a
global consultative process to determine whether an international assessment of
agricultural knowledge, science, and technology (AKST) was needed. This initiative
was prompted by discussions at the World Bank with the private sector and
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) on the level of scientific understanding
of biotechnology and more specifically transgenics. During 2003, eleven
consultations were held, overseen by an international multistakeholder steering
committee, involving over 800 participants from all relevant stakeholder groups
such as governments, the private sector, and civil society. Based on those
consultations, the steering committee recommended to an Intergovernmental
Plenary meeting in Nairobi (September 2004) that an international assessment of
the role of agricultural knowledge, science, and technology (AKST) in reducing
hunger and poverty, improving rural livelihoods and facilitating
environmentally, socially and economically sustainable development was needed.
The concept of an International Assessment of Agricultural Science and
Technology for Development (IAASTD) was endorsed as a multi-thematic, multi-spatial,
multi-temporal intergovernmental process with a multistakeholder Bureau
cosponsored by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United
Nations, the Global Environment Facility (GEF), United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the World Bank, and
World Health Organization (WHO).
The IAASTD’s governance structure is a unique hybrid
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the nongovernmental
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. The stakeholder composition of the Bureau was
agreed at the Intergovernmental Plenary meeting in Nairobi; it is
geographically balanced and multistakeholder with 30 government and 30 civil
society representatives (NGOs, producer and consumer groups, private sector
entities and international organizations) in order to ensure ownership of the
process and findings by a range of stakeholders.
About 400 of the world’s experts were selected by the
Bureau, following nominations by stakeholder groups, to prepare the IAASTD
Report (composed of a global and five sub-global assessments). These experts
worked in their own capacity and did not represent any particular stakeholder
group. Additional individuals, organizations, and governments were involved in
the peer review process.
The IAASTD development and sustainability goals were
endorsed at the first Intergovernmental Plenary and are consistent with a
subset of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): the reduction of hunger
and poverty, the improvement of rural livelihoods and human health, and
facilitating equitable socially, environmentally and economically sustainable
development. Realizing these goals requires acknowledging the multifunctionality
of agriculture: the challenge is to simultaneously meet development and
sustainability goals while increasing agricultural production.
Meeting these goals has to be placed in the context of
a rapidly changing world of urbanization, growing inequities, human migration,
globalization, changing dietary preferences, climate change, environmental
degradation, a trend toward biofuels, and an increasing population. These
conditions are affecting local and global food security and putting pressure on
productive capacity and ecosystems. Hence there are unprecedented challenges
ahead in providing food within a global trading system where there are other
competing uses of agricultural and other natural resources. AKST alone cannot
solve these problems, which are caused by complex political and social
dynamics; but it can make a major contribution to meeting development and
sustainability goals. Never before has it been more important for the world to
generate and use AKST.
Given the focus on hunger, poverty, and livelihoods,
the IAASTD pays special attention to the current situation, issues, and
potential opportunities to redirect the current AKST system to improve the
situation for the rural poor, especially small-scale farmers, rural workers,
and others with limited resources. It addresses issues critical to formulating
policy and provides information for decision makers confronting conflicting
views on contentious issues such as the environmental consequences of
productivity increases, environmental and human health impacts of transgenic
crops, the consequences of bioenergy development on the environment and on the
long-term availability and price of food, and the implications of climate
change on agricultural production. The Bureau agreed that the scope of the
assessment needed to go beyond the narrow confines of S&T and should
encompass other types of relevant knowledge (e.g., knowledge held by
agricultural producers, consumers, and end users) and that it should also
assess the role of institutions, organizations, governance, markets, and trade.
The IAASTD is a multidisciplinary and multistakeholder
enterprise requiring the use and integration of information, tools, and models
from different knowledge paradigms including local and traditional knowledge.
The IAASTD does not advocate specific policies or practices; it assesses the
major issues facing AKST and suggests a range of AKST options for action that
meet development and sustainability goals. It is policy relevant, but not
policy prescriptive. It integrates scientific information on a range of topics
that are critically interlinked, but often addressed independently, i.e.,
agriculture, poverty, hunger, human health, natural resources, environment,
development, and innovation. It will enable decision makers to bring a richer
base of knowledge to bear on policy and management decisions on issues
previously viewed in isolation. Knowledge gained from historical analysis
(typically the past 50 years) and an analysis of some future development
alternatives to 2050 form the basis for assessing options for action on science
and technology, capacity development, institutions and policies, and
investments.
The IAASTD is conducted according to an open,
transparent, representative, and legitimate process; is evidence-based;
presents options rather than recommendations; includes risk assessment,
management, and communication; assesses different local, regional, and global
perspectives; presents different views, acknowledging that there can be more
than one interpretation of the same evidence based on different world views
(along with an indication, when possible, of doubts harbored); and identifies
the key scientific uncertainties and areas on which research could be focused
to advance development and sustainability goals.
The IAASTD is composed of a global assessment and five
sub-global assessments: Central and West
Asia and North Africa - CWANA; East and South Asia and the Pacific - ESAP;
Latin America and the Caribbean - LAC; North America and Europe - NAE; and Sub-Saharan
Africa – SSA. The IAASTD (i) assesses
the generation, access, dissemination, and use of public and private sector
AKST in relation to the goals, using local, traditional, and formal knowledge;
(ii) analyzes existing and emerging technologies, practices, policies and
institutions and their impact on the goals; (iii) provides information for
decision makers in different civil society, private, and public organizations
on options for improving policies, practices, institutional and organizational arrangements
to enable AKST to meet the goals; (iv) brings together a range of stakeholders (consumers,
governments, international IAASTD agencies and
research organizations, NGOs, the private sector, producers, the scientific
community) involved in the agricultural sector and rural development to share
their experiences, views, understanding, and vision for the future; and (v)
identifies options for future public and private investments in AKST. In
addition, the IAASTD will enhance local and regional capacity to design,
implement, and utilize similar assessments.
In this assessment, “agriculture” is used and
understood in the widest sense of the term.
However, as in all assessments, some topics were covered less
extensively than others (e.g., livestock, forestry, fisheries, and agricultural
engineering), largely due to the expertise of the selected authors. Originally
the Bureau approved a chapter on plausible futures (a visioning exercise), but
later there was agreement to delete this chapter in favor of a more simple set
of model projections. Similarly, the Bureau approved a chapter on capacity
development, but this chapter was dropped and key messages integrated into
other chapters.
The IAASTD draft Report was subjected to two rounds of
peer review by governments, organizations, and individuals. These drafts were
placed on an open access web site and open to comments by anyone. The authors
revised the drafts based on numerous peer review comments, with the assistance
of review editors who were responsible for ensuring the comments were
appropriately taken into account. One of the most difficult issues authors had
to address was criticisms that the report was too negative. In a scientific
review based on empirical evidence, this is always a difficult comment to
handle, as criteria are needed in order to say whether something is negative or
positive. Another difficulty was responding to the conflicting views expressed
by reviewers. The difference in views was not surprising given the range of
stakeholder interests and perspectives. Thus, one of the key findings of the
IAASTD is that there are diverse and conflicting interpretations of past and
current events, which need to be acknowledged and respected.
The global and sub-global Summaries for Decision Makers
and the Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report were approved at an
Intergovernmental Plenary in January 2008. The Synthesis Report integrates the
key findings from the global and sub-global assessments, and focuses on eight
Bureau-approved topics: bioenergy; biotechnology; climate change; human health;
natural resource management; traditional knowledge and community-based
innovation; trade and markets; and women in agriculture.
The IAASTD builds on a number of recent assessments and reports that have
provided valuable information relevant to the agricultural sector, but have not
specifically focused on the future role of AKST, the institutional dimensions,
and the multifunctionality of agriculture.
These include FAO State of Food Insecurity in the World (2004);
InterAcademy Council Report: Realizing the Promise and Potential of African
Agriculture (2004); UN Millennium Project Task Force on Hunger (2005);
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005); CGIAR Science Council Strategy and
Priority Setting Exercise (2006); Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management
in Agriculture: Guiding Policy Investments in Water, Food, Livelihoods and
Environment (2007); Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Reports (2001 and
2007); UNEP Fourth Global Environmental Outlook (2007); World Development
Report 2008: Agriculture for Development (World Bank 2007); IFPRI Global Hunger
Indices (yearly); and World Bank Internal Report of Investments in SSA (2007).
Financial support was provided to the IAASTD by the
cosponsoring agencies, the governments of Australia, Canada, Finland, France,
Ireland, Sweden, Switzerland, US and UK, the European Commission, and CropLife
International. In addition, many organizations have provided in-kind support.
The authors and review editors have given freely of their time, largely without
compensation.
The global and sub-global Summaries for Decision Makers and the
Synthesis Report are written for a range of stakeholders, i.e., government
policy makers, private sector, NGOs, producer and consumer groups,
international organizations, and the scientific community. There are no
recommendations, only options for action. The options for action are not
prioritized because different options are actionable by different stakeholders,
each of whom have a different set of priorities and responsibilities and
operate in different socioeconomic circumstances.
The assessment for Latin
America and the Caribbean (LAC) involved 43 authors from 15 countries who, in a
collaborative effort, met over a two-year period and prepared the Report.
SUMMARY
A critical but balanced assessment indicates that over the past 60
years, the [agricultural] knowledge, science, and technology (AKST) system successfully
generated knowledge and produced technological innovations that were adopted
and used by some producers and helped boost productivity and agricultural
production and enhance the competitiveness of the conventional/productivist market-
and export-oriented system. However, the
AKST system did not prioritize or allocate adequate resources to issues related
to the environment, social inclusion, reducing hunger and poverty, equity,
diversity, and cultural affirmation. Indigenous/traditional systems have not
been included on the AKST agenda, while agroecology has existed and remained peripheral
to AKST. This assessment provides
options aimed at managing and strengthening the AKST system and reorienting its
agenda with a view to furthering development and sustainability goals.
Societies and governments are facing the challenge of attributing
greater importance to agriculture not only as an engine of economic development
that generates employment and income, but also as a multidimensional
asset. The rural sector is making an
actual and potential contribution in the form of environmental and recreational
products and services, which are being sought by society to provide well-being
and quality of life. AKST alone is not a panacea for the host of political and
economic constraints that stymie sustainable and equitable economic development
or poverty and hunger reduction in the region.
However, investment in AKST can contribute to and facilitate improvement
of the living conditions of the people of Latin America, particularly in rural
areas, where poverty is more abject. Findings
suggest that public investment in and institutional reforms of AKST can help
countries meet their development and sustainability goals.
To achieve positive
results, AKST will have to undergo sweeping change in order to move toward a
system of innovation and inclusive development that incorporates, in
particular, small producers, agroecological producers, and indigenous
producers. The current environmental situation calls for urgent action oriented
toward transition to sustainable models that draw on the strengths of the
knowledge of the three productive systems: the traditional/indigenous, the
agroecological, and the conventional/productivist systems. At the same time, in order to meet the urgent
needs associated with rural poverty in a way that allows this population segment
and marginalized areas to benefit from development, it is essential to devise a
territorial rural development strategy that enhances the value of this social
environment from the standpoint of both production and its lifestyle.
In order to be able to respond to
these multifaceted challenges, AKST will have to adopt a holistic,
multidisciplinary, and multisectoral agenda.
The problems in the agricultural sector should be of interest not only
to producers but to society as a whole.
The rural sector plays a critical role in the context of a comprehensive
poverty reduction strategy. However, the
unstructured and inequitable interaction between rural and urban areas warrants
consideration based on comprehensive visioning given its impact on sustainable
development, and in an equitable manner, in the interest of present and future
generations.
CONTEXT, TRENDS, AND CURRENT SITUATION
What are the main production systems in Latin
America and the Caribbean and how have they performed?
In the agricultural sphere in Latin America, the means of production are
heterogeneous and cultural approaches and actors, diverse. This diversity leads to differences in
production systems, which entail not only different approaches to cultivating
the land and managing productive resources, but also to complex and
heterogeneous ways of interacting with the land, the environment, and the
social, economic, and cultural milieu and, in some instances, to starkly
different world views. [Chap. 1]
For purposes of this assessment, three major categories of agricultural
systems are reviewed: the traditional/indigenous
system, which includes the indigenous, rural, and Afro-American system and
is based on local/ancestral knowledge and is rooted in the land. The conventional/productivist
system includes intensive production practices and is oriented toward
monoculture, the use of external inputs, and production geared toward a broad
market. In the agroecological system, productive systems are viewed as ecosystems where
mineral cycles, energy processing, biological processes, and socioeconomic
relations are studied and analyzed not only to maximize production, but also to
make optimal use of the agroecosystem as a whole. It is based on agroecological science and
productive diversification, enhancing the value of traditional knowledge, and knowledge
sharing. These systems interact and some
reveal a blend of characteristics, as well as varying levels of market
integration. [Chap. 1] Historically, the
development of these three systems in the region has been heterogeneous.
The traditional/indigenous system is based on the management and use of
biodiversity and discovery-oriented and lifestyle systems, and has generated
varying levels of production (ranging from high to very low). Its world view
links nature and culture (Figure LAC-SDM-1). External conditions demonstrate
that sustainability is not always possible. [Chap. 1]
Insert Figure LAC-SDM-1. Andean World View
The conventional system is based on high levels of production and
competition for external and domestic markets (Figure LAC-SDM-2). However, in
general terms, the system has not been sustainable from an environmental
standpoint, efficient from an energy standpoint, or equitable from a social
standpoint. [Chap.1]
Insert Figure LAC-SDM-2. Production
Trends and Agricultural Yield of the Conventional/productivist System - the Case
of Argentina
The agroecological system is environmentally and socially sustainable,
energy efficient, and capable of achieving high levels of productivity when
properly managed. This system has been stymied by a dearth of
government/institutional support programs and by the greatly unmet need for the
knowledge and expertise that are required for its implementation. [Chap. 1]
What has been
the relationship between the agricultural models of development and the sustainable
development goals in the region?
The
development models of the last 60 years accorded priority to the
conventional/productivist system, resulting in a sharp increase in productivity
and agricultural production, without a significant reduction in poverty and
undernutrition. In the LAC region,
approximately 209 million persons are poor and 54 million, undernourished. These figures represent 37 percent and 10
percent of the total population, respectively, despite the fact that three
times more food is produced than is consumed. [Chap. 1] In addition, the region
has the highest rates of inequality in the world. (Figure LAC-SDM-3)
Insert Figure LAC-SDM-3. Unequal
Land Distribution
Some of the factors that have
prevented production levels from reducing hunger levels and a proportional
reduction in poverty include a lack of access to and poor distribution of food,
weak purchasing power of a significant sector of the population and, until
recently, low prices paid to producers as a result of a policy to keep food
prices low in urban areas. [Chap. 1]
Despite the fact that the LAC
region does not face a chronic shortage of such available natural resources as
arable land, water, and biological and crop diversity, these resources have
been underutilized or poorly utilized, as demonstrated by the large estates [latifundios] or poorly utilized
land. More and more, this situation has
led to a loss of soil and biodiversity, owing to problems of erosion,
urbanization, contamination, and the intensification and expansion of
agriculture toward land that is less productive. [Chap. 1]
Cultural modernization and the
emphasis placed on the conventional/productivist system have undermined
sociocultural diversity, local/traditional know-how, and agro-biodiversity, all
of which are essential for the development of intensive knowledge-based
agroecological systems. The dominant
conventional technologies have supplanted local/traditional knowledge and
expertise. This process of cultural,
genetic, and technological erosion has led to the rejection of the rural and
ancestral cultural heritage that is in harmony with the surrounding environment
and the adoption of external knowledge and cultures that are relatively
homogenous. [Chap. 1]
Agricultural policies and
commercial processes that promote the exploitation, privatization, and
patenting of natural resources have curbed access to and control over these
resources (land, water, and seeds) by small producers and the rural poor. As a result, wealth and land concentration,
marginalization, exclusion, and poverty have increased. While trade liberalization policies have
created market opportunities for the region and, in a number of cases, have produced
significant upward trends in GDP, they have also heightened the vulnerability
of small and medium-sized producers, and have favored, with a few exceptions,
big producers, thereby increasing economic inequality in the region. [Chap. 1]
In general terms, the
importation of subsidized food has led to the disruption of local production
systems, creating a high level of dependence on food produced in other
countries. This situation is exacerbated
when the food-related purchasing power of the rural population declines,
whether this food is local or imported.
This situation has led to a loss of food sovereignty, and of access to and
social control over communal public goods, particularly in the most vulnerable
sectors. [Chap. 1]
The problem has grown worse in
recent years owing to unequal trade relations which, in most cases, have led to
unfair competition and situations where local producers had to compete with
producers of other countries where production is either subsidized or takes
place with more sophisticated technology.
“Dumping” has played a role in the displacement of many small producers
and has prompted a rural exodus. In some
cases, these producers reacted by forming cooperatives and associations and by
developing market alternatives such as fair trade markets and organic products,
despite the difficulties encountered with gaining access to credit, markets,
and transportation. However, many big producers
and some countries in the region managed to become active players in the international
market, achieving high levels of competitiveness. In most cases, however, the wealth generated
by these opportunities has not trickled down to the poorest population sectors,
a factor that has served to heighten economic inequalities. [Chap. 1]
How has the AKST agenda responded to the
development model and production policies implemented over the last sixty
years?
In response to the development model and production policies
implemented, the priority of the AKST agenda was to increase production in
order to meet the demands of the domestic and export markets. While the results were satisfactory from a
productivity standpoint, they failed to address the problems faced by small
producers, and traditional and indigenous communities, or those pertaining to
poverty reduction, hunger, or environmental degradation. Until the 1990s, the development
model primarily sought to increase production and productivity in the
agricultural sector and facilitate entry into national and international
markets. In many countries, this strategy had negative social and environmental
effects, which were ignored by the system until the last decade, when AKST
began to gain a better understanding of these effects, influenced in part by
demands from civil society organizations and social movements. At the same time, the phenomenon of
globalized communication resulted in the coalescence of preferences of a
growing number of consumers in developed countries, who were willing to pay
more for products generated using alternative technologies that are
environmentally friendly and socially just. This phenomenon prompted changes in
the research agenda and paved the way for a number of small producers to enter
the market using agroecological technologies and developing a heritage-based
value for their products. [Chap. 2]
Does the AKST system currently meet the demands
of society?
The current AKST system does not fully meet the new demands of society,
which require a more diverse, complex, and holistic agenda that reconciles
seemingly conflicting objectives such as competitiveness, sustainability, and
social and cultural inclusion. The AKST agenda allowed
for limited participation by users and civil society, and failed to attach
sufficient importance to small producers or the issue of poverty. High priority was accorded to lines of
research that sought to promote increased productivity, neglecting social,
cultural, and environmental aspects. [Chap. 2]
Is the AKST structure suitable for the development of
technologies to promote the common good?
The reduction
of the public component of the AKST system has limited its contribution, which
is necessary for the development of technologies that cannot be acquired and
seek to promote the common good. The LAC
region has made limited investments in research and development (Figure LAC-SDM-4), and in most
countries, with the exception of Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Uruguay, and
Argentina, among others, the public component of the AKST system was reduced to
a minimum. Innovative alternatives that
promote comanagement between public and private organizations, along with civil
society participation [Chap. 2], were recently developed, but must not replace
significant public sector participation in research and development.
Insert Figure LAC-SDM4. Investments in Research and Development
Insert Box LAC-SDM-1 Scenarios
CONDITIONS AND OPTIONS FOR MEETING THE DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
GOALS
What modifications need to be made to the AKST agenda and its execution
in order to meet the development and sustainability goals?
The general objective of the
proposed reforms is to reorder research priorities and provide information on the
public component of the AKST agenda in order to make it more inclusive and
sustainable from a social, economic, cultural, and environmental standpoint. A number of options are outlined below:
·
Promote greater participation and democratization in the definition and
execution of the AKST agenda with a view to integrating sectors that have been
excluded. Actions should therefore seek to expand access to information, build or
strengthen their capacities to participate in decision making, and provide
institutional forums for discussion and decision making. [Chap. 4]
·
Promote interaction between traditional, agroecological, and conventional
knowledge and expertise. To
this end, it would be appropriate to develop an
intercultural participatory agenda that preserves and enhances the value of local
knowledge, supplements it with scientific knowledge where relevant, and
contributes to greater sustainability of productive systems, more efficient use
of natural resources, and higher land yields, while maintaining, promoting, and
enhancing the cultural and biological heritage of local communities. The
current AKST system must be bolstered in order to make its agenda more
holistic, complex, and diverse, which will address the problems faced by
traditional and conventional systems, so that they will both evolve toward a
more agroecological model. [Chap. 4] (Figure LAC-SDM-5)
Insert Figure LAC-SDM-5. Transition to Sustainable Systems
·
Redirect priorities toward
strengthening research for greater environmental and social sustainability
without compromising productivity. AKST must scale up investment in the development of
knowledge-based systems in order to support agroecological systems. This would
facilitate greater development of all systems (agroecological, indigenous, and
conventional), and would, in particular, reduce and mitigate the environmental
and social impact caused by more intensive agricultural and aquatic systems,
thereby reducing the adverse effects of agriculture on climate change. [Chap.
4]
·
Redirect research in new fields of knowledge in order to meet the
sustainability and development goals, without neglecting productivity (e.g. the
complexity of biological systems, biotechnology, information technologies,
precision agriculture, biomedicine, and alternative medicines). Tap into
the potential of new fields of knowledge in order to find solutions to poverty
and its effects. This would allow the proposed options to achieve the goals of
poverty reduction, hunger, undernutrition, human health, and environmental
conservation, provided they adhere to the precautionary principle and select
technologies that facilitate simultaneous achievement of the greatest number of
sustainability and development goals.
The foregoing would entail the creation of funds to finance the
production of regional and global public goods. [Chap. 4]
·
Strengthen research activities in
urban and periurban agriculture. These activities have had a demonstrated positive
impact on food security and sovereignty, in addition to producing social
benefits such as the strengthening of community organizations and others in the
third sector. [Chap. 4]
·
Focus AKST strategies on conservation
(in-situ and ex-situ) and the sustainable use of biodiversity. Biodiversity, both domestic and wild,
is the main source of opportunities for the development of new products and
ecological functions that help to meet the growing demand for food and other
products, in a context of economic and climate change. [Chap. 4]
·
Promote integrative research methods for better understanding of the
dynamic relationship between water, soil, and biological processes (e.g. pest
management, recycling of nutriments), and interactions between ecological and
social systems. Most of
the region’s natural habitats have undergone a high degree of
fragmentation. Consequently, production
systems often serve as a matrix that includes natural habitat fragments or
patches. AKST should take this situation into account and examine the
interactions between the production systems, natural systems, and the social
dynamic. [Chap. 4]
·
Develop and strengthen innovations that foster sustainable
competitiveness, internalize environmental and social costs, and improve access
to markets (domestic and export) for all sectors, but for the most vulnerable
social groups in particular. Included among these innovations
are those that:
a) Organize
and empower small producers;
b) Add value
and contribute to sustainable productivity and product differentiation;
c) Encourage
consumers to use those products;
d) Develop
traceability and food safety systems; and
e) Address
health, environmental, and biosafety barriers through the development of
low-cost health protocols and technologies.
·
Strengthen intervention strategies aimed at expanding participation to primarily disseminate knowledge among disadvantaged communities to help
meet sustainable development needs. This process must consider the cultural
identity of communities. Moreover, public AKST must also take into account
expansion needs in conventional production systems, in order to appropriately
validate the technologies generated by private research and development and
offer alternatives for the transition to sustainable systems. Bringing
producers together through networks contributes to an exchange of experiences,
knowledge, and technologies.
·
Promote greater participation of women in managing organizational
models, in generating and disseminating knowledge, and in the various
strategies for culturally appropriate development. The needs of women in
productive systems must be addressed, given their important role in society and
rural areas. AKST has a key responsibility
in enhancing the participation and leadership roles of women, which, despite
improvements in recent years, are still very limited in producer organizations
and within the AKST system itself.
·
Promote research and outreach to diversify activities in rural areas. Producers
can earn additional income in other areas such as local agroindustries,
handicraft, agrotourism, ecotourism, and forest ranger activities, the use of
native or overlooked species and varieties such as medicinal plants that have
not been commonly used, textile production, the establishment and maintenance
of in-situ seed banks, and the use of plants in dyes, essences, fragrances, and
other products.
What modifications are needed in the AKST institutional framework
(management and capacities) in order to meet the development and sustainability
goals?
Consideration should be given to the following options:
·
Promote intercultural education institutions in order to encourage
ongoing local capacity and skill building and development.
·
Promote and strengthen the development of networks with a view to
establishing decentralized governance models, focusing on small producers, the
rural and urban poor, and civil society, in order to achieve collective
benefits that take into account private and public interests. Synergetic and complementary capacities must
be developed in order to achieve the objectives that cannot be accomplished in
isolation. Increased civil society participation will result in better and
greater social control of AKST, with respect to its agenda and performance,
adhering to the principles of transparency and “accountability.” The promotion
of structures that facilitate dialogue between peasant farmers, social
movements, and other stakeholders and the AKST system will replicate the
positive impact already achieved by them.
·
Strengthen AKST interactions at the
regional and global level, based on solidarity and joint responsibility, to
generate public goods. Promoting interaction among AKST
systems in the LAC region at the local and international level will help build
the relative strengths of each one of the countries in the region. This
would require the coordination of international cooperation programs that take
into account the rural sector and, in particular, the small-scale production
and traditional/indigenous production sectors. These programs must be assessed
in order to identify the most effective way of gaining access to them and
streamline as much as possible the wide variety of models, ensuring that these
programs will provide benefits for the target countries and their most
vulnerable communities.
·
Strengthen, through AKST,
direct links between food producers and consumers. It
is important to
promote dialogue among these stakeholders, which will help producers enter the
market, particularly the smaller producers, in areas such as participatory
organic certification. AKST can contribute to the development, productivity,
and competitiveness of shorter production chains, where producers and consumers
interact and focus on mutual needs, primarily in the local markets.
·
Promote the conduct and dissemination of critical assessments of the
possible environmental, social, cultural, economic, and health impact of new
technologies. AKST impact assessment studies must have two
main objectives: (1) report to the society on
investments made; and (2) demonstrate to the society the importance and impact
of outputs generated. The incorporation of these impact assessment studies into
the research process would prompt research in these new technologies to take
into account the socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental context where they
are to be applied. These studies must include the analysis of
all the effects of their outputs (economic, social,
environmental, and others), and must be linked to a program in order to
communicate findings. For example, the current impact of transgenic crops and the
use of food crops to generate energy need to be assessed.
What support
policies are required for AKST to meet the development and sustainability
goals?
In order to meet
the development and sustainability goals, AKST Public Support Policies must transcend models based on the
assumption that the market alone can address the issues of economic and
cultural poverty, hunger, and inequality. For
example, Figure 6 presents a set of public policy options pertaining to food
sovereignty. In order to implement
public policies, it is necessary to achieve broad political and social
consensus that will establish a legitimate strategic framework that can be
sustainably applied in the short, medium, and long term. This framework must be
based primarily on decentralized governance models at the local and regional
level, and on participatory mechanisms for ex-ante
and ex-post assessments of the impact
of the various public policy instruments. This is crucial for adapting and
implementing instruments in each specific situation.
Insert Figure LAC-SDM-6. Public
Policy Options that Contribute to Food Sovereignty
Macroeconomic Policies
Public policies
must seek, on an ongoing basis, to ensure macroeconomic stability, which does
not distort the relative price structure in LAC economies with respect to their
long-term equilibrium levels. Otherwise, there is a risk of bolstering only the sectors that already
possess export capacity; discouraging those that lack this capacity, either
because they have not yet been able to build it, or because their production is
geared toward the local market or for consumption by the producers; or
promoting import sectors that compete fiercely with national producers.
Sectoral Regulation Policies
Sustainable Natural
Resource Management Policies. Territorial development and ecological/economic zoning should be utilized
as tools for this policy in order to formulate rules for land use, ranging from
conservation to intensive agricultural use, with a view to achieving a mosaic
of sustainable agroecosystems [Chap. 5]. The socioeconomic
context must be taken into account in order to offer viable alternatives with
AKST support.
Land access and land tenure policies. Despite agrarian reform efforts in several LAC countries, the region
has the most unequal land distribution system in the world. Agrarian reform and
land tenure are topical issues that affect the region’s agricultural
development. However, given the heterogeneity of the LAC region, the significance
of this issue should be addressed at the country level. Land tenure is closely
linked to poverty, hunger, and the displacement of small farmers, peasant
farmers, and indigenous farmers from rural to urban areas, and cultural and
biodiversity erosion. [Chap. 5]
Policies governing
access to genetic resources and the equitable distribution of benefits
generated by their use.
Compliance with international agreements in this area (for example, the Biodiversity Convention), as well as the development
of other complementary national and international legal frameworks, should be
promoted, in order to guarantee access by local communities to genetic
resources and the equitable distribution of benefits among the custodian
communities. [Chap. 5]
Biosafety policies
that establish regulatory frameworks and instruments that regulate the
consumption of transgenic organisms, and ensure prevention of genetic
contamination in the centers of origin and genetic diversity. At the discretion
of each country, the regulatory framework may prevent use in centers of origin
and genetic diversity. In
regions or countries that choose to produce GMOs, regulations should be based
on the precautionary principle and the right of consumers to make an informed
choice, through labeling, for example. Transgenic crops have been gradually
adopted in the LAC region, producing effects on sustainability, poverty
reduction, and equity goals, perceived by some as negative and by others as
positive [Chap. 1].
Transgenic crops are used primarily in the
commercial production of cotton, soybeans, corn, and canola. The social and
environmental effects differ for each of these crops and for each country in
the region. While the technology has been quickly adopted by producers in the
conventional/productivist system, thereby increasing yields, it has also helped
to exacerbate the aforementioned social and environmental degradation in a
number of regions. The effects of emerging technologies on sustainability goals
are still widely debated. The possibility of genic contamination in some
species has been demonstrated and must be an integral part of biodiversity
policies, which should also avoid genic contamination of other transgenic-free
productive systems. Edible transgenic crops used to
produce nutraceuticals, biopharmaceuticals, or nonedible industrial products
must also be taken into account. [Chap. 5]
Alternative energy supply
policies based on renewable sources prompted by the global energy crisis
provide opportunities for and pose threats to the agricultural sector; their
externalities should therefore be carefully analyzed. Agricultural production for use as energy alternatives to fossil fuels
has surged in recent years in the LAC region, benefiting a number of
socioeconomic sectors and providing alternative markets for the agroindustrial
sector. While these crops present an opportunity for rural revitalization, they
also undoubtedly involve environmental and social risks. In a number of LAC
countries, the expansion of crops for agrofuels based on a few species such as
sugarcane, palm oil, soybeans, and forest products, has led to the reduction in
the land area earmarked for food production, owing to substitution or
displacement, which has had an impact on food security in some regions, and affected
primarily small producers, indigenous populations, and other traditional
communities. However, the use of animal and plant byproducts and waste as a
source of biofuels has helped to mitigate environmental problems [Chap. 5]. AKST must make a much more
significant contribution in terms of providing more information for and
increasing access to clean energy by rural communities.
Policies to mitigate impact and
reduce emissions that exacerbate climate change. Urgent measures are needed to reduce emissions
and their adverse impact, particularly on the most vulnerable communities, and
establish regulations for more responsible energy use [Chap. 1]. Agroecological systems that increase the soil’s organic
matter, thus enhancing carbon sequestration, should be promoted. Clean
development mechanisms provide opportunities for the producers in the region
[Chap. 5]. Other alternatives include carbon sequestration in forest species,
the protection of native forests, energy source substitution, the use of animal
and plant waste to generate energy, and the recognition of environmental
services and benefits.
Regulations on health, good
agricultural practices, and regional public goods. Governments must implement
specific policies for producers and indigenous farmers who wish to enter the
market, in order to help them adapt to the changing patterns of agricultural
and agroindustrial competitiveness. These changes, among others, stem from new
regulatory standards for plant and animal health, food safety, environmental
care, and quality control, and go beyond aesthetics.
Incentives
for entry of small producer products into large-scale distribution
(supermarkets). The growth
of globalized large-scale distribution has created problems in several
countries for small retailers and the agrifood industry, and thus for producers
[Chap. 1]. Owing to considerable disparities in
purchasing power, government intervention is required with respect to
regulations and the strengthening of producer organizations. Furthermore, the
requirements of these chains are too stringent and thus cannot be easily met by
smaller producers; however, there are cases where producer organizations have
met the requirements and gained access to global markets.
Regulations
on pesticide use. Despite the fact that most countries
have regulations governing the use of agrochemicals, many rural communities in
the LAC region are still grappling with the problem of acute and chronic
poisoning because it is difficult to enforce these regulations at the individual
level [Chap. 1].
It is essential that AKST propose education and training programs for
producers and their families on the appropriate use of these products and their
dangers.
Policies for the transition of productive systems
Policies to promote
and support the transition from productive, conventional, and
traditional/indigenous systems to sustainable agricultural models, while
maintaining efficiency and productive competitiveness, and internalizing
environmental and social costs. While certain
traditional production systems link culture to environmental preservation,
policy tools should be designed for each stage of the transition of systems
that need them—chemical input reduction, efficient energy use, higher levels of
diversification, and agroecological management—in a bid to maintain efficiency,
sustainability, and productive competiveness. [Chaps. 4, 5]
Financial support programs for the transition of communities to a
sustainable productive system. One very important aspect that must be
considered in financial policies designed to support AKST systems is the fact
that in many parts of the LAC region, the situation entails one of starting a
process under challenging conditions that are very much characterized by urgent
subsistence needs, and where access to own resources is significantly
lacking. It is virtually impossible for
these rural communities to tackle, on their own, the challenge of lifting
themselves out of their current situation and developing an economically and
environmentally sustainable productive system. Financial support should be generated in order to pave the way for
organized and gradual transitions. [Chap. 4, 5]
Marketing and market access policies
Strengthening
the local market and the rural-urban link. Processes
to allow producers to establish links with local markets must be made easier,
by simplifying the process of complying with trade and health standards and
promoting various forms of linkages between consumers and producers, and the
market and traditional cultures.
Active commercial
policies for the domestic and international markets aimed at generating market
power through the creation of differentiated assets. A number of promotional instruments (appellations of origin,
collective marks, internationally recognized protocols, eco-labeling, organic
production, and integrated production, among others) should be applied. For
producers who so desire, these strategies are implemented with a view to
building specific assets, which are different from commodities, thus leveraging
the specific characteristics and advantages that small-scale production and
traditional/indigenous production can offer. This will require appropriate
institutional frameworks that promote the marketing of these ventures
(environmental standards, certification standards, appellations of origin,
etc.), and bolster their negotiating power with sectors that are “at an
advanced stage” in the marketing chain. [Chap. 5]
Policies to gain
access to international and regional markets, including entry into protected agricultural and agroindustrial markets
in developed countries. These policies should seek to gradually eliminate the
competitive inadequacies of small- and medium-scale production and
traditional/indigenous production sectors in the region, and mitigate the
effects of trade agreements on the more fragile sectors. Implementation of
these policies requires complete transparency in international and regional
negotiations in the LAC region from the initial stages of managing negotiation
processes, and organizations of small producers and peasant and indigenous
farmers must acquire the capacities needed for negotiations and adequate
representation in these processes. [Chap. 5]
Policies for investment in AKST, innovation,
and its financing
Policies to raise the low levels of investment observed in AKST systems
in the entire LAC region and in a number of countries. These
policies should seek to increase the positive effects in order to alleviate
poverty and the difficult conditions faced by rural populations in the region,
and reduce AKST dependence on technological innovations generated outside the
region. Financing should be achieved
through budgetary autonomy and independence. [Chap. 5]
It is
necessary to implement policies that ensure the stability of AKST and its
projects, so that this system can formulate and
implement long-term policies, such as those pertaining to adaptation to climate
change, pest and disease control, and the quality of agricultural products.
[Chap. 5]
Subregional and regional cooperation policies designed to ensure that
increased investments in AKST systems will derive benefit from experiences, generate
economies of scale
(strategic partnerships), and minimize duplication in Research and Development
(R&D).
Policies for the development of institutions to promote culturally
appropriate innovations. Such policies should be implemented through
coordination among various government agencies tasked with formulating
innovation policies at the local, regional, and national levels, grouping together
agricultural and rural development in clusters, and linking them to knowledge,
science, and technology. [Chap. 5]
Policies to finance investments in AKST, innovative networks, and the
development of participatory mechanisms to guarantee not only adequate and timely financing, but also the
coordination of viable instruments to channel these resources toward the
specific objective of strengthening the AKST with respect to the rural sector,
and its impact on poverty reduction in this sector.
Policies to promote access to financial
services
Policies to provide access by poor and low-income sectors to financial
services are required, because this will provide key support to enable the AKST
system to meet the development and sustainability goals. Policies should promote training and
strengthening of financial systems that have been tailored to the conditions
and needs of these sectors, in terms of encouraging savings, financing, and
insurance, taking into account their ability to gain access to these financial
services. However, formulation of these
policies should take into account and reflect the different conditions and
needs of the various sectors. For example, the
extreme poverty sector faces the challenge of building basic capacities and
institutions, while the poor and low-income sectors need to establish or
strengthen existing institutions (credit unions, etc.); guarantee systems,
property rights, risk management, and certification for livestock, are also
areas requiring improvement. [Chap. 5]
Policies for institutional development and capacity building in several
areas.
Policies aimed at establishing
a legal, institutional, and economic framework that promotes and facilitates
actions by agents involved in the AKST system. These policies include:
a)
The development of different types of networks for horizontal relationships (between farmers) and vertical
relationships (producers with consumers and the industry), and for all of these
with the AKST system, civil society organizations, and political institutions.
b)
The promotion of international coordination. It is common in LAC countries to implement various programs with
international cooperation, which are not interconnected or coordinated, and are
executed by various administrative units and ministries. The policy should seek
to facilitate coordination among the sectors involved in order to incorporate
the AKST system that is appropriate and relevant for the region.
c)
The promotion of access by and joint participation of civil society in
order to improve and benefit from social control of the AKST system by
democratizing the decision-making process and integrating excluded sectors. Such actions will require a legal and
institutional framework that facilitates and does not hinder change; policy instruments that allow these stakeholders to have greater access
to relevant information will therefore be needed.
d)
The development and promotion of ongoing and intercultural education
that also fosters and strengthens cultural affirmation, and develops
appropriate capacities for the various productive systems. Access by rural populations to labor markets
should be facilitated through policy instruments such as educational reforms
for the target communities, which include intercultural and multilingual
training, training for specialized teachers, the development of physical and IT
infrastructure, and scholarships and training programs for skill development.
e)
Build awareness among and educate decision makers about the potential
contribution of knowledge and innovations to development. Given that decision makers are often not specialists in this area, the
system must make a considerable effort to ensure that they understand its
potential to meet the development and sustainability goals.