000 04973nam a22004217a 4500
001 G77121
003 MX-TxCIM
005 20211006081518.0
008 121211s ||||f| 0 p|p||0|| |
020 _a970-648-104-4
040 _aMX-TxCIM
072 0 _aA50
072 0 _aE14
082 0 4 _a338.91
_bWAT
100 1 _aSauvé, R.
_uInternational conference on impacts of agricultural research and development: Why has impact assessment research not made more of a difference?
110 0 _aCentro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maiz y Trigo (CIMMYT), Mexico DF (Mexico)
111 2 _aInternational Conference on Impacts of Agricultural Research and Development
_cSan José (Costa Rica)
_d4-7 Feb 2002
245 0 0 _aAn assessment of IPGRI's impact on international policy-making:
_b A case study of the international undertaking on plant genetic resources (1996-2001)
260 _aMexico, DF (Mexico)
_bCIMMYT :
_c2003
300 _ap. 65
340 _aPrinted
520 _aWhile political influence is often assumed for international organizations, it is rarely subjected to a thorough assessment. This study addresses this empirical gap by examining the political influence exerted by the Intemational Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) in the international negotiations pertaining to the revision of the International Undertaking for Plant Genetic Resources (IU). More specifically, the study aimed to assess the level of political influence attained by IPGRI in the renegotiations of the IU, and to obtain knowledge about the general processes by which the Institute exerts influence. The knowledge gained through this assessment would then allow the identification of potential future courses of action for IPGRI in international decision-making. The evaluation covered a five-year period (1996- 2001), representative of the different phases that marked the negotiation process. It employed a methodological framework developed expressly to assess the political influence exerted by international non-govemmental organizations in the framing of the Climate Change and Biological Diversity Conventions. This method draws conclusions from different dimensions of evidence, and is well suited to assessing political influence in complex decision-making. This study obtained evidence from IPGRI staff members who were involved in the negotiations about the expected ways and means by which IPGRI was thought to have been influential, -the so-called "ego-perception." These perceptions were then either validated or negated by the gathering of other players' perceptions of the Institute's influence ("alter-perception"). In this case, the alter-perception was provided by national delegates and by members of the secretariat of the FAO Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, which manages the negotiation process. Finally, the validity of these perceptions was checked through document analysis ("researcher's analysis"). Empirical results relating to IPGR's political influence were subsequently linked to a theoretical framework that provided a basis on which to explain IPGR's capacity to exert influence. This theoretical framework was built on three criteria: (1) that it would be consistent with the chosen methodology; (2) that it would provide explanatory knowledge on the processes of influence and fill in the gaps where the empirical data was inconclusive; and (3) that it would take into account the limited capacity of an international agricultural research center, as opposed to that of a state, to exert influence in international bargaining. A review of the pertinent international relations literature and the framing of relevant variables provided such a framework. The results indicate the most effective ways by which an international agricultural research center can exert influence in international policy-making. The provision of timely and relevant technical input (that is, input directly linked to the organization's domain of expertise) is seen as the prominent means of achieving influence in such a context. Yet, the results also show that other factors may enable or constrain organizations like IPGRI in international decision- making. While political neutrality and reliability were seen as enabling factors, it remained clear that all international organizations lack the resources or formal rights that endow states.
546 _aEnglish
591 _a0310|AGRIS 0301|AL-Economics Program|R01PROCE
593 _aJuan Carlos Mendieta
595 _aCPC
650 1 0 _aAgricultural policies
650 1 0 _aBiological differences
650 1 0 _aClimatic change
650 1 0 _aTechnological changes
653 0 _aCIMMYT
650 1 7 _aGenetic resources
_gAGROVOC
_2
_91127
650 1 0 _91109
_aFarming systems
_gAGROVOC
650 1 7 _aAgricultural research
_gAGROVOC
_2
_91006
700 1 _aWatts, J.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _9960
_aWatson, D.J.
_gResearch & Partnership Program
_8INT3479
_eed.
942 _cPRO
999 _c6869
_d6869