Forum global sur la sécurité alimentaire et la nutrition (Forum FSN)

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    • Mme Milly Monkhei

      Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural resources (BUAN)
      Botswana

      Inevitably the Youth are the future of every nation and the bright future of every nation is born in today's Youth hence the urgent critical need to address Youth issues. Youth in Africa face challenges even after going through youth specific capacity development initiatives in agriculture, paramount to these challenges is sustainability. Initiatives or interventions are supposed to be time bound or be for a specific period with the believe and hope that after the intervention the intended will hold on sustainably. Most of the time it is not the case as the intended objective is often short lived because of various reasons. Success stories do exist or have happened but some have dimmed out usurping the blazing hope of success and sustainability that was the initial objective of specific interventions. Depending on the time it took to observe the good practices that added life to the interventions for the period of their existence, yes good practices have been learnt and successes have been experienced and hence can be shared even though they have their expiry dates dictated by new challenges that wared and defeated against them. This says to us interventions, specific and targeted as they may be are necessary but are not in any way adequate, therefore to stop at intervention and expect sustainability is not astute policy decision as it has proven to be inadequate by the many interventions that failed especially those that had only intervention (a short term take on) as an objective with no subsequent processes to ensure the desired sustainability (a long haul phenomenon).

      The Youth need to collaborate, engage, link up, commit to growth/sustainability, and passionately believe that whatever they lay their hands to and work out will work out. There is huge potential for modern technologies in sustaining capacity development initiatives in agriculture, if they will be planned well, scoped well, resourced well, targeted well, implemented well, monitored and evaluated well. Surely it can be achieved.

    • Mme Milly Monkhei

      Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural resources (BUAN)
      Botswana

      I will focus my contribution on question three "Have you had any experiences of linking research and policy regarding sustainable agricultural systems for nutrition?" sharing the Botswana experience, a middle income country. Research on technology adoption by small holder farmers in Botswana has revealed that small holder farmers did not adopt raw planting, a technology meant to increase yield per hectare of food staples (sorghum, maize and legumes).In the drive to improve small holder productivity government implemented a raw planting policy that got small holders to take up the technology as they were not to be given seed if they did not raw plant. This policy has seen small holder farmers raw planting and mono-cropping against the nutrition provision of their broadcasting method which ensured that many crops of different nutritive value were planted in one hectare. This is an example of conflicting efforts through policy dispensation. With broad casting small holder farmers were assured sustainable nutrition from a variety of crops that provided nutrition diversity, but with raw planting and mono-cropping the technology compromised nutrition diversity at house hold level for small holder farmers.

      This says to us, it is very important to widely and in detail consider the implication and consequences of policies on different target groups before they are implemented, especially that in a heterogeneous population a one size fit all policy will never address nor achieve the intended end without appreciating and considering heterogeneity of the target population.