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Agrarian research institutes and civil society in kazakhstan and kyrgyzstan - In search of linkages

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Author(s)
Childress, Malcolm D.
Keywords
agricultural ethics
research ethics
civil society
GE Subjects
Political ethics
Ethics of political systems
Ethics of law
Rights based legal ethics
Governance and ethics
Development ethics

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/178949
Abstract
"The issue of how civil society can work better with research and extension services at the local level is frequently raised in policy debates. Malcolm D. Childress explores this question with respect to the research programmes and agricultural production of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The questions and challenges surrounding the linkage between civil society and agricultural research in these two countries are similar to those faced in many parts of the world where agricultural development plays a key role in food security, poverty reduction and growth. Because of privatization, farm restructuring, the breakdown of Soviet distribution channels and the severe capital constraints on farmers, there is a demand in both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan for research into the development of low-cost technologies that meet local and regional needs. But agricultural research systems still largely reflect the model instituted during the Soviet period. In many cases, on-farm trials, farmer-driven research and adapting technology to cost considerations remain new and foreign concepts to researchers. However, as the country case studies show, these systems are under pressure to change. The imperatives of farmers and the market economy are increasingly being felt in the agricultural research community. Despite these pressures, and significant contractions in staffing and resources, the agricultural research systems—which still comprise highly trained scientists—are the nuclei of technology and contact with global institutions; but as the country cases demonstrate, the research priori-ties of these systems continue to reflect national geopolitical and economic interests, in many cases limiting their relevance to the immediate needs of farmers. These research institutions, how-ever, have great potential as mediators between state goals for agricultural and rural develop-ment, the new class of family farmers that has emerged since privatization, and the domestic and international markets that structure opportunities for these farmers. This potential will only be fully realized if research systems can shed their inherited institutional approaches to setting priorities and rewarding researchers, and adapt their basic research and diffusion activities to new demands from the farmers. Civil society has a large potential role to play in assisting the agricultural research community to adapt to the needs of the new agricultural sector. Interna-tional experience with civil society and agricultural research linkages offers compelling sugges-tions of the shape such a transformation might take."(pg iii)
Date
2004-11
Type
Book
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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Globethics Library Submissions
Ethics in Higher Education

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