New methods and old institutions: The 'systems context' of farmer participatory research in national agricultural research systems: The case of Uganda

TR Number

Date

1999

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

UK: Department for International Development

Abstract

Farmer participatory research (FPR) methods have been advocated as a means of increasing the client focus of agricultural research in developing countries. The National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) in these countries have adopted them to varying degrees--often as an implicit conditionality of donor supported research projects. This paper seeks to demonstrate that, despite the apparent acceptance of FPR in NARS, the fundamental nature of the relationship between scientists and farmers remains unchanged. FPR has largely failed in its attempts to improve the efficiency of agricultural research by restructuring science/production relations. This failure is the result of the 'systems problem' in agricultural research, whereby the complex interrelationship of actors, institutions and resources prevents FPR methods being compatible with NARS.

Description

Metadata only record

Keywords

Participatory processes, Extension service, Community institutions, Community participation, Farmer participatory research, Technology development, Relationship between scientists and farmers, Farm/Enterprise Scale

Citation

Agricultural Research and Extension Network Paper No. 93