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News Brief: Week of April 26 2010

Science and Innovation for Development: launch in Nairobi, Kenya
Source: Imperial College London
Nairobi, Kenya - April 27 2010

In conjunction with the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), the book Science and Innovation for Development, by Gordon Conway and Jeff Waage with Sara Delaney, was given an African launch in Nairobi on April 7th, 2010.
 
Dr. William Songa, Agriculture Secretary for Kenya, opened the event, giving a warm welcome to our group, while stressing that the book would potentially be helpful as Kenya drafts a new agricultural strategy.
 
Dr. Peter Matlon, the event chair, introduced co-author Professor Sir Gordon Conway, who delivered the keynote speech. He gave the audience insight into both why the book was written, and some of the key material and messages contained within it. Leading into the panel discussion, contributing author Sara Delaney gave a brief highlight of the book's 'Combating Hunger' chapter.
 
This was followed by words from each of four panel members, representing key agricultural organisations based in Nairobi: Dr. Mataruka, Director of AATF, Dr. Mukisira, Director of KARI, Dr. Devries, Director of the Program for Africa Seed Systems at AGRA, and Mr Bruce Scott, Director of Partnerships and Communications at ILRI.
 
Each gave a unique and passionate look at how their organisation is using science, technology and innovation to address food security challenges in Eastern Africa, as well as praising the book for its scope, comprehensiveness, and timing. 
 
The event was attended by a very engaged and enthusiastic audience from a wide variety of organisations and media outlets in Nairobi, who raised a number of challenging questions for discussion, and will hopefully enjoy, learn from, and share the content of the book.
The book is available in open-access format from: www.ukcds.org.uk.
 

EVENTS

 

 

World Food Law Institute Round Table

Wednesday, April 28, 3-5 pm

Embassy of Indonesia

2020 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.

 

 

"Debt for Nature Swaps: Is the Concept Transferable to Agricultural Development for Food Security?"

 

With:

 

Thomas Lovejoy, Ph.D.

Heinz Center Biodiversity Chair

Originator of the Concept of Debt-for-Nature Swaps and Founder of the Public Television Series "Nature"

 

 

To RSVP and for information, contact Professor Marsha Echols 202 806 8039 or worldfoodfriends@gmail.com

 

 


 
2010 Annual Conference
"Finding Common Ground on Foreign Aid: New Development
Paradigms for 2010 and Beyond"

April 29, 2010
Omni Shoreham Hotel
Washington, DC

 
 
These are exciting times in our field. There is now widespread agreement that international development is a moral, economic, and security imperative. This recognition has spawned intense debate around the world on the content and delivery of development aid. To bring our membership's deep expertise into this dialogue and help shape the outcome most favorably for development, our theme for this year's annual conference is "Finding Common Ground on Foreign Aid: New Development Paradigms for 2010 and Beyond." Through this conference, we continue to bring the unique breadth and many voices of our membership into the important dialogue around building consensus and shaping the future of development aid.

Conference Highlights:

 
  • Keynote Speakers: Ambassador M. Nathaniel Barnes, Ambassador from the Republic of Liberia to the United States; and Michael Klein, Former VP, Financial and Private Sector Development; Chief Economist, IFC

 

  • First annual SID-Washington International Development Media Award to be presented to Moisés Naím, Editor-in-chief, Foreign Policy magazine

 

  • A plenary panel on New Paradigms for Development in 2010 and Beyond

 

  • Breakout sessions on critical issues: Job Creation through the Private Sector in the Era of the "New Normal"; Stabilization and Fragile State Development: Perspectives and Lessons Learned; Making Development Smarter - Science, Innovation and Learning; and Can We End Hunger? Deepening the Dialogue on Food Security 

 

  • Recognition of excellence among young development professionals with the Truman Award

 

  • Extensive networking opportunities, including a closing wine and cheese reception

 

 

 

 
Ministerial Meeting on Higher Education in Agriculture (CHEA), 15-19 November 2010, Kampala, Uganda 
 
Venue & Dates
 
The Conference, to be hosted by the Government of Uganda, will be held at the Speke Hotel, Munyonyo in Kampala, Uganda from 15-19 November 2010, starting with parallel sessions (15-16 November) and plenaries and round table discussions 17-19 November 2010.
 
Knowledge is central to a nation’s competitiveness and its economic destiny. Over the past decade Africa as a whole, due to improved governance and better commodity prices has done well in terms of GDP growth. There is also evidence of improved factor productivity in agricultural production. However, non-Africans are evidently doing even better out of Africa’s natural resources in terms of capturing value addition, skilled employment and capital gains, even in agricultural commodities. This is an indictment of Africa’s weak science and technology capacity.
 
Agriculture is Africa’s greatest industry and is recognized in the Lagos declaration and by the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) as the essential engine for economic development. However, all major studies (WSSD, IAC, and Commission for Africa) have highlighted the urgent need to strengthen Africa’s human and institutional capacity for agricultural innovation. African governments have made great progress in providing for more graduates. Student intake at existing institutions has been increased several fold. In addition, from less than 50 in 1950 there are now over 200 tertiary education institutions providing courses in agriculture and natural resource management. Never the less the International Foundation for Science (IFS) has warned of the dire consequences of the ‘missing generation of African scientists’. The assessment of national agricultural research systems conducted by Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) found systemic human and institutional capacity weaknesses including the imminent retirement of a disproportionate number of senior staff in the absence of adequately experienced successors.
 
The African Union through NEPAD has developed the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme (CAADP), as a framework to revitalize the agricultural sector. This is presently being implemented by the member governments to contribute to achieving 6% annual economic growth rate in the continent. CAADP Pillar four, for which FARA is the Lead Institution, focuses on strengthening agricultural research, technology dissemination and adoption. Implementation of this and the other three pillars requires that the continent develops a strong science and technology capacity, both in terms of the infrastructure and human resource base. Hence capacity strengthening is a cross cutting component of Pillar IV.  In addition to its overall commitment to strengthening research and training institutions NEPAD is also supporting the establishment and strengthening of recognized specialized centres of excellence in areas of science that are critical to enabling Africa to take full advantage of what modern science has to offer. It is critical that the gene, nano and other revolutions should not by-pass Africa as the Green Revolution did. Universities must play a pivotal role in providing the human and institutional resource required by these centres and industry as a whole.  
 
The surge of formerly undeveloped Asian economies in the past which are now well ahead of Africa is a painful demonstration of the consequence of Africa’s under investment in education and training. The unacceptable state of affairs in African tertiary education is well articulated in the Millennium Declaration of African Universities and the presentation to the Royal Society by His Excellency President Paul Kagame. Only well educated and highly trained, skilled and motivated Africans will provide the solution to Africa’s poverty and continued economic marginalization.
 
A recent World Bank study concluded “African universities and other institutions of higher learning ultimately will be responsible for replenishing the stock of human capital in national research and extension services, and for providing them with the broader set of skills necessary to grow agriculture in the 21st century. However, they are ill prepared at present to train the continent’s next generation of agricultural scientists, professionals, and technicians. As stated by NEPAD in the Framework for African Agricultural Productivity “…urgent action must be taken to restore the quality of graduate and postgraduate agricultural education in Africa.”
 
Africa, as a continent, must urgently respond to the human resource crisis by strengthening and coordinating investments in Higher Education. Accordingly, the representatives at the FARA General Assembly Meeting held in June 2007 in Johannesburg, South Africa, called for a Ministerial Meeting to mobilise support and resources for Higher Education in science and agriculture. The Advisory Committee on S&T for ACP Agricultural and Rural Cooperation which is supported by the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation - ACP-EU Advisory Committee, the World Bank, several other international organizations and regional bodies have called for national governments to pay more attention to the crisis in higher education. They further call on the international community to increase investments in Tertiary Education especially in science, engineering and agriculture. During the Meeting of the Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Building in Agriculture (RUFORUM) held 27-29 August 2007 in Maputo, Mozambique, the Vice Chancellors of Universities from eastern and southern Africa recommended that because of the urgent need to re-build the deteriorating human resource base in the continent, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, the issue of Higher Education be put at the highest possible political level of the African governments. In this regard, it was recommended that a regional meeting of Ministers responsible for Education, Agriculture, Science & Technology, Finance and Planning be convened by NEPAD and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). Further it was also recommended that a few High Policy level champions, especially Heads of States, be invited to address the meeting. The just concluded Global Conference on Agricultural Research held in Montpellier, France (28-31 March 2010) came to the same conclusion: Africa will not achieve the Millennium Development Goal target of Food Security and reducing poverty without strong and sustained investment in Agricultural Tertiary education, the key catalyst for driving innovations in the agricultural sector. The meeting called for high level policy intervention and a partnership approach to address the human and institutional capacity gaps in Africa.
 
Objectives of the Ministerial Meeting
 
  1. To focus attention of persons with the authority and influence to make a difference on the state of tertiary education in Africa (including a review of progress in implementing the Dar-es-Salaam meeting of Ministers and the Cape Town Declaration of Ministers responsible for Science and Technology)
  2. To set out what is required for the universities to become learning institutions producing graduates who are fit for purpose in 21st century Africa including how to get the facilities, professional satisfaction and remuneration required to retain Africa’s best brains in Africa.
  3. Facilitate international networking to spur and sustain re-engineering of Higher Education Institutions in Africa.
  4. Mobilize African universities to be more pro-active in engaging in Africa’s development and in particular to make their due contribution to research and innovation
  5. Mobilize political and development commitment for increasing investments in Higher Education in Africa
 
Approaches
 
1. Hold Policy dialogue platforms involving Key Ministries involved in Higher Education, such as Ministries of Education, Agriculture, Science & Technology, Finance and Economic Planning, other development actors, Regional and Sub-regional bodies involved in Higher Education, Universities and others to share lessons and approaches. 
2. Hold a meeting on the potential of African universities to drive the innovation Africa needs to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Universities and their co-actors will present their vision of what would be possible if they could realize their full potential to conduct science and what that would require in terms of human, institutional, physical and financial resources. The presentations will present a practical picture of ‘what could be’ set against a background of the actual conditions under which the universities are functioning today.  
3. Feed the deliberations from the policy dialogues into the Ministerial Forum.
  
Conveners
 
The Conference is being convened by Uganda Government and RUFORUM in partnership with NEPAD, COMESA, FARA, CTA, Association of African Universities (AAU), FANRPAN (Food Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network), ATPS (African Technology Policy Network) and ANAFE (African Network of Agriculture and Forestry Education).
 
Target participants
 
Policy makers, especially Ministers responsible for Education, Agriculture, Science & Technology, Finance and Planning; Technical experts in the focus ministries; University Vice Chancellors and their Deans, University Networks, Development Partners/NGOs, sub-regional organizations, University partners in Research for Development such as research and extension, Farmer organizations, and knowledge centres and networks within and outside Africa.
 
Conference information
 
Will be posted at the conference website (www.ruforum.org/Ministerial_conference)
 
Conference Contact Details
 
Prof Adipala Ekwamu
RUFORUM Secretariat
Plot 151 Garden Hill, Makerere University
PO Box 7062 Kampala, Uganda
Tel 256 414 535939/256 772 601875
Fax: 256 414 534153
 

 
Please join us this THURSDAY, April 29th, at 4pm to celebrate the introduction of the Global Resources for Women to Thrive (GROWTH) Act!
"The Power of Property Rights and Other Key Factors in Ending Poverty"
Thursday, April 29th
 
4 - 5pm
U.S. Capitol Building
Room HC-6
Speakers will include:
 
Conresswoman Nita M. Lowey
 
Ritu Sharma, Co-Founder and President, Women Thrive Worldwide
 
Lydia Sasu, Executive Director, Deveopment Action Association (Ghana)
 
Liz Blake, Senior Vice President, Habitat for Humanity International
 
TBD, CARE
 
To view the complete invitation, please click here.
 
If you plan to attend the event this Thursday, please RSVP to Michelle Mazzeo at mmazzeo@womenthrive.org
 

 

Launch of Science and Innovation for Development in Nairobi, Kenya
Source: Imperial College London
Nairobi, Kenya - April 27 2010
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