1st Edition

Sustainable Intensification Increasing Productivity in African Food and Agricultural Systems

Edited By Jules Pretty, Camilla Toulmin, Stella Williams Copyright 2011

    Continued population growth, rapidly changing consumption patterns and the impacts of climate change and environmental degradation are driving limited resources of food, energy, water and materials towards critical thresholds worldwide. These pressures are likely to be substantial across Africa, where countries will have to find innovative ways to boost crop and livestock production to avoid becoming more reliant on imports and food aid. Sustainable agricultural intensification – producing more output from the same area of land while reducing the negative environmental impacts – represents a solution for millions of African farmers.

    This volume presents the lessons learned from forty sustainable agricultural intensification programmes in twenty countries across Africa, commissioned as part of the UK Government's Foresight project. Through detailed case studies, the authors of each chapter examine how to develop productive and sustainable agricultural systems and how to scale up these systems to reach many more millions of people in the future. Themes covered include crop improvements, agroforestry and soil conservation, conservation agriculture, integrated pest management, horticulture, livestock and fodder crops, aquaculture, and novel policies and partnerships.

    1. Editorial  2. Overview – Sustainable Intensification in African Agriculture  3. Quncho: The First Most Popular Tefvariety in Ethiopia  4. The Ghana Grains Partnership  5. Orange-fleshed Sweet Potatoes for Food, Health and Wealth in Uganda  6. Soyabeans and Sustainable Agriculture in Southern Africa  7. Growing Sustainable Tea on Kenyan Smallholder Farms  8. The System of Rice Intensification (SRI) as a Sustainable Agricultural Innovation: Introducing, Adapting and Scaling up Sri Practices in the Timbuktu Region of Mali  9. Revival of Cassava Production in the Nakasongola District, Uganda  10. Addressing the Challenges of Agricultural Service Provision: The Case of Oxfam's Strategic Cotton Programme in Mali  11. Promoting Smallholder Seed Enterprises (SSE): Quality Seed Production of Rice, Maize, Sorghum and Millet in Northern Cameroon  12. Research, Development and Scaling up the Adoption of Fodder Shrub Innovations in East Africa  13. Trees, Agroforestry and Multifunctional Agriculture in Cameroon  14. Using Soil and Water Conservation Techniques to Rehabilitate Degraded Lands in Northwestern Burkina Faso  15. Agricultural Success from Africa: The Case of Fertilizer Tree Systems in Southern Africa (Malawi, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe)  16. Harnessing Sustainability, Resilience and Productivity through Conservation Agriculture: The Case of Likoti in Lesotho  17. Conservation Agriculture (CA) in Tanzania: The Case of Mwangaza B CA Farmer Field School (FFS), Rhotia Village, Karatu District, Arusha  18. An African Success: The Case of Conservation Agriculture in Zimbabwe  19. Push-pull Technology: A Conservation Agriculture Approach for Integrated Management of Insect Pests, Weeds and Soil Health in Africa  20. Sustainable Crop Production Intensification in the Senegal and Niger River Basins of Francophone West Africa  21. On-farm Biological Control of the Pearl Millet Head Miner: Realization of Thirty-five Years of Unsteady Progress in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger  22. African Indigenous Vegetable Enterprises and Market Access for Small Scale Farmers in East Africa  23. Merudairy Goat and Animal Healthcare Project  24. Collective Livestock Research for Sustainable Disease Management in Mali and Burkina Faso  25. The Rakai Chicken Model: An Approach that has Improved Fortunes for Ugandan Farmers  26. The Malawi Agricultural Input Subsidy Programme: 2005/6 to 2008/9  27. Focal Area Approach: A Participatory Community Planning Approach to Agricultural Extension and Market Development in Kenya  28. Sharing Ideas Between Cultures with Videos  29. CARBAP and Innovation on the Pantain Banana in West and Central Africa  30. The Rise of Peri-urban Aquaculture in Nigeria  31. From Researcher to Farmer: Partnerships in Integrated Aquaculture – Agriculture Systems in Malawi, Ghana and Cameroon

    Biography

    Jules Pretty is Pro-Vice-Chancellor at the University of Essex, and Professor of Environment and Society at the University of Essex, UK. His 16 books include This Luminous Coast (2011), The Earth Only Endures (2007), and Agri-Culture (2002). He is Chief Editor of the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability and received an OBE in 2006 for services to sustainable agriculture, and an honorary degree from Ohio State University in 2009. Stella Williams is from Nigeria, and is a fisheries and agricultural economist with experitse in rural economic development. She has served on many international Boards where she ensures support for women and youth empowerment. She is an advocate for educational development across sub-Saharan Africa. Camilla Toulmin has studied land tenure, farming strategies and livelihood options in dryland Africa. An economist by training, she is Director of the IIED and a member of the UK government Foresight project.

    'The excellent introductory essay by the three editors emphasises the importance of both social and technical factors, including the importance of recognising farmers' knowledge and the inclusion of farmers as partners in technology development and participatory extension. The vision of the authors is much broader than the run of the mill food production volume ... There is much to learn from the 40 sustainable agricultural intensification programmes addressed in this book" – Louise Fortmann, Experimental Agriculture, Cambridge University Press.