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The CGIAR at 31: An independent meta-evaluation of the consultative group on international agricult |
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 The CGIAR at 31 The original mission of the CGIAR was a strategic, science-based focus
on increasing " the pile of rice on the plates of food-short consumers,
" as characterized by a former chairman. It was to use the best science
in advanced countries to develop technologies for the benefit of food
deficit countries and populations. But a rapidly changing external
environment has led to an expanded mission and mandate. The mission
statement adopted in 1998 is " food security and poverty eradication in
developing countries through research, partnerships, capacity building,
and policy support, promoting sustainable agricultural development
based on the environmentally sound management of natural resources. "
Several forces continue to influence the CGIAR ' s mandate. First, the
rise of civil society organizations and the empowerment of marginal
groups and women have increased donors ' attention to social concerns.
By restricting their funding to preferred programs and areas, donors
are altering the composition of CGIAR activities. Second, water
shortages, soil degradation, climate change, and loss of biodiversity
have increased the prominence of natural resource management (NRM),
policy, and social science research. The new research topics (in which
proponents argue the CGIAR has developed a " dynamic comparative
advantage " ) are downstream activities, closer to the farmer, which
entail local expertise and solutions, while traditional germplasm
improvement research builds on the CGIAR ' s historical comparative
advantage. Third, the growing importance of genetic resource
management, the biotechnology revolution, intellectual property rights
(IPR), and private sector research call for System-level responses,
strategies, and policies.
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