Methodological Perspectives on Organizational Partnerships as a Governance Form in Policy Processes
In: Journal of policy practice: frontiers of social policy as contemporary social work intervention, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 35-57
ISSN: 1558-8750
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In: Journal of policy practice: frontiers of social policy as contemporary social work intervention, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 35-57
ISSN: 1558-8750
In: IFPRI Discussion Paper 01305
SSRN
Working paper
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 125-128
ISSN: 1469-7777
Peter Oksen's comments on our paper about farmer–herdsman relations
in Burkina Faso raise some interesting issues, notably regarding
problems of interpretation of oral and archival sources and regarding
the broader relevance of insights gained from an in-depth case study.
Before answering straightforwardly to his objections, it is useful to
clarify the misunderstanding which appears to exist about the meaning
we attribute to 'symbiosis' and 'symbiotic relations'. In our article we
restricted the use of these terms to the way in which past relations
between farmers and herdsmen, depicted as undifferentiated groups, are
often represented. In discussions about the change of these relations,
the emphasis is on progressive deterioration, again without attention
paid to the possible existence of intra-group differentiation or of
heterogeneity of relations across group boundaries. In this regard, it is
remarkable that from colonial documents the interests of farmers and
herdsmen emerge as equally irreconcilable as they are often considered
today, and that, just as at present, competition over scarce natural
resources constituted a major factor in inter-group relations. If we
therefore reject 'symbiosis' as a correct description of formerly existing
inter-group relations, we do not intend to imply that complementary
links – such as those we describe for present-day relations between
Mossi and Fulbe – did not exist in the past. A major aspect of our
argument is that inter-group relations, whether past or present, cannot
be subsumed under simplifying labels such as 'symbiosis'. Neither can
changes in these relations be understood in terms of uni-directionally
processes of deterioration. Hence, present-day 'complementary' links
across the ethnic boundary – established by certain, but not all, Mossi
and Fulbe actors – are but a manifestation of the continued presence of
diversity of relations, not of 'symbiosis'. They point to mutual interests
between certain actors belonging to different ethnic groups, not
between the groups as such.
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Band 36, Heft 3, S. 357-380
ISSN: 1469-7777
Conflicts between farmers and herdsmen are certainly not new
phenomena: they already occurred at the time of the biblical
patriarchs. In West Africa, conflicts over the use of scarce natural
resources between farmers and herdsmen are said to be on the
increase. The occurrence of such conflicts is generally attributed to
growing pressure on natural resources, caused by population increase,
the growth of herds and the extension of cultivated areas outpacing
population growth. That such conflicts appear to oppose two ethnic
groups – generally Fulbe herdsmen versus a population group
of
farmers – is explained by the fact that not only has overall competition
over natural resources increased due to a saturation of space, but that
at the same time a balance between the two groups has been broken.
The convergence of production systems, as a result of farmers engaging
in cattle breeding and herdsmen in agriculture, entailed the disappearance
of both ecological and economic complementarity between
the two groups – a process that is said to have been accelerated
by the
droughts of the 1970s and 1980s. The interpretation of these conflicts
depends on the – sometimes implicit – assumption that formerly,
in an
often unspecified epoch in the past, relations between farmers and
herdsmen could be conceived of in terms of symbiosis – a relationship
based on mutual dependence and mutual advantage with implied
complementarity in the ecological and economic spheres.
In: IFPRI Discussion Paper 01349
SSRN
Working paper
Strong partnerships – encompassing organizations and stakeholders from around the world – will form the core of Food Industries for People and Planet (FIPP). This roundtable event served to establish a European Chapter of the FIPP Consortium by bringing together key European research institutes working on food systems and food industries with representatives of major food companies, government agencies, and development agencies. The European Chapter of the FIPP Consortium will engage with ongoing food policy and development cooperation debates for reshaping food systems in Europe and developing countries. The European Chapter will engage with the broader FIPP Consortium so that all stakeholders can jointly benefit from synergies and work together to identify priority research topics and develop a funding strategy. ; Non-PR ; IFPRI1; FIPP; UNFSS ; MTID; DGO
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