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Promoting sustainable agricultural production in rice-wheat systems of South Asia

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Mexico, DF (Mexico) : CIMMYT : Rothamsted Research, 2004.Description: 36 pagesSubject(s): Summary: “Green Revolution” technologies helped avert food shortages in South Asia. However, they didn’t reduce poverty as much as anticipated and today many people still remain hungry and poor. Future focus is needed to address issues of poverty as well as production gains needed to match population growth. These will have to come from innovative yield enhancing technology that improves farmer livelihoods, uses natural resources efficiently and minimizes environmental degradation. Various options are discussed in this paper for the populous rice-wheat areas of the Indo-Gangetic Plains. Poverty and the role of livelihood approaches are also discussed with a section on how best to extend new technologies to resource poor farmers so their livelihoods can also be improved. The paper concludes that an expanded set of stakeholders working in innovative alliances will be needed for extending complex conservation agriculture technology to this bypassed group of farmers. The paper ends with suggestions on future research needs including the need for some important social science research looking at the impacts and needed policy decisions for the new labor saving technology on employment, migration and how conservation agriculture techniques impact on rural livelihoods.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book CIMMYT Knowledge Center: John Woolston Library CIMMYT Staff Publications Collection CIS-4458 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 633045
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“Green Revolution” technologies helped avert food shortages in South Asia. However, they didn’t reduce poverty as much as anticipated and today many people still remain hungry and poor. Future focus is needed to address issues of poverty as well as production gains needed to match population growth. These will have to come from innovative yield enhancing technology that improves farmer livelihoods, uses natural resources efficiently and minimizes environmental degradation. Various options are discussed in this paper for the populous rice-wheat areas of the Indo-Gangetic Plains. Poverty and the role of livelihood approaches are also discussed with a section on how best to extend new technologies to resource poor farmers so their livelihoods can also be improved. The paper concludes that an expanded set of stakeholders working in innovative alliances will be needed for extending complex conservation agriculture technology to this bypassed group of farmers. The paper ends with suggestions on future research needs including the need for some important social science research looking at the impacts and needed policy decisions for the new labor saving technology on employment, migration and how conservation agriculture techniques impact on rural livelihoods.

Text in English

0505|AL-Wheat Program|AL-Economics Program

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