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The New Harvest: Agricultural Innovation in Africa
Calestous Juma
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Description for The New Harvest: Agricultural Innovation in Africa
Paperback. Filled with case studies from within Africa and success stories from developing nations around the world, The New Harvest outlines the policies and institutional changes necessary to promote agricultural innovation across the African continent. Num Pages: 360 pages. BIC Classification: 1H; KCM; KNAC. Category: (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly. Dimension: 141 x 210 x 25. Weight in Grams: 380.
African agriculture is currently at a crossroads, at which persistent food shortages are compounded by threats from climate change. But, as this book argues, Africa can feed itself in a generation and help contribute to global food security. To achieve this Africa has to define agriculture as a force in economic growth by: advancing scientific and technological research; investing in infrastructure; fostering higher technical training; and creating regional markets. To govern the transformation Africa must foster the emergence of a new crop of entrepreneurial leaders dedicated to the continent's economic improvement. This new edition of The ... Read moreNew Harvest provides ideas on how to implement a series of high-level decisions adopted by African leaders to place agriculture at the center of the continent's long-term economic transformation. It puts agriculture in the context of the Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy (STISA-24) adopted by African presidents in 2014. More importantly, this edition provides a policy framework that could be adopted for other sectors such as health, industry and green innovation. Incorporating research from academia, government, civil society, and private industry, the book suggests multiple ways that individual African countries can work together at the regional level to develop local knowledge and resources, harness technological innovation, encourage entrepreneurship, increase agricultural output, create markets, and improve overall economic performance. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Place of Publication
New York, United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
About Calestous Juma
Calestous Juma is Professor of the Practice of International Development and Director of the Science, Technology, and Globalization Project at Harvard University.
Reviews for The New Harvest: Agricultural Innovation in Africa
With the current economic situation reinforcing the urgency to find lasting solutions to Africa's challenges, The New Harvest is a worthy addition to the discussion.
Daily Monitor, Uganda
This eminently readable book is full of golden nuggets. Calestous Juma goes to great lengths to make clear, particularly to us in the West who think that ... Read morewe have all the solutions for African agriculture, that there is no single solution to Africa's problems. We should listen to the people who must do the seed propogation and promotion, to the women who will grow and harvest the seeds and to those responsible for storage and distribution whilst not forgetting the importance of livestock. He shows how we can help to provide the means by working from the bottom up rather than the top down in education, transport infrastructure, water conservation and power sources. The book should be read by all those intending to help Africa.
Countess of Mar, Independent Peer of the UK House of Lords and Farmer
I applaud the two main messages of the book: that science and technology can help increase agricultural productivity; and that agricultural productivity is a powerful tool in reducing poverty.
Lord Sainsbury, Businessman and Former UK Science Minister
Lively, provocative and well-evidenced.
Lawrence Haddad, Director of the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex
Through The New Harvest, Professor Juma is sending a timely and optimistic message, going well beyond what has already been written about agriculture in Africa. The book is timely because we are experiencing a double-dip food price crisis, but also because a new generation of African leaders is committing 10% of their countries' budgets to agriculture. It is optimistic, because many African countries are growing at an impressive pace, including in agricultural productivity.
Sir Gordon Conway, Professor of International Development, Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London, and author of The Doubly Green Revolution
The New Harvest underscores the importance of global learning in Africa's agricultural development. It offers new ideas for international cooperation on sustainable agriculture in the tropics. It will pave the way for improved collaboration between Africa and South America.
Laura Chincilla, President of Costa Rica
New technologies, especially biotechnology, provide African countries with additional tools for improving the welfare of farmers. I commend this book for the emphasis it places on the critical role that technological innovation plays in agriculture. The study is a timely handbook for those seeking new ways of harnessing new technologies for development, including poor farmers, many of whom are women.
Blaise Compaore, President of Burkina Faso
This book is a forceful reminder of the important role that African women play in agriculture on the continent. It is critical that they are provided with equal educational opportunity as a starting point for building a new economic future for the continent.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of the Republic of Liberia, Nobel Peace Prize Winner, 2011
This book presents a timely analysis of the importance of infrastructure in improving Africa's agriculture. Leaders at national and state levels will benefit immensely from its evidence-based recommendations.
Goodluck Jonathan, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Calestous Juma has once again produced a book that will be an important reference for scholars, researchers and practitioners in their search for ways to break the persistent conundrum that is Africa's failure to properly exploit its huge agricultural potential. The book reveals his exceptional ability to express ideas that will be relevant to the emerging trends in Africa's agricultural and political economy.
Monty Jones, Executive Director, Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa, and 2004 World Food Prize Laureate
Calestous Juma draws on a rich harvest of research to write a convincing analysis of the importance of innovation and entrepreneurship in the agricultural sectors of Africa. Hopefully, it will be widely read by scholars and policy analysts across Africa as well as outside. It is a great book.
Elinor Ostrom, Professor of Political Science, Indiana University, and 2009 Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences
Calestous Juma of Harvard University, has produced a book of evidence-based recommendations for transforming African food production. As Professor of the Practice of International Development and Director of the Science, Technology, and Globalization Project at Harvard, he recognises the shortcomings of the past, particularly the lack of political and, consequently, financial commitment to agriculture, but he also instances the recent changes in political and investment emphasis that could provide foundation for a new and more fruitful era.
New Agriculturist
My husband [Lloyd Timberlake, author of Africa in Crisis] came into the house yesterday, tossed me [this] book and said: 'You and your staff should read this book from beginning to end. Every single page. It is all you need to know to do your job.' I have never heard him sound like that about any book!
Susan Sechler, Managing Director, TransFarm Africa
A remarkably optimistic outlook for agriculture in Africa...Juma's account succeeds in offering a glimpse of the possible. The book provides a welcome relief from the gloom and despair in popular narratives about African agriculture.
Science
[Calestous Juma's] optimism is refreshing
a welcome antidote to the pessimistic view of African development of previous decades.
This is a refreshing new book that steps back from the usual debates about appropriate agricultural policies and programme interventions for redressing Africa's pressing poverty and food security needs, to take a longer-term view of the kinds of science-based interventions that are needed to launch Africa's agricultural sector on a structurally different trajectory...Calestous Juma develops a compelling vision of how knowledge and innovation systems that bring together the best of modern science and local knowledge could...lead to agricultural growth clusters that would drive national and regional economic growth across Africa.
INternational Affairs
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