Helen Hambly
| تَنظِيم | University of Guelph (Canada) |
|---|---|
| Organization type | University |
| Organization role |
Associate Professor/Researcher
|
| الدولة | Canada |
| Area of Expertise |
Rural Broadband
Agricultural extension and capacity development Rural communication networks and services Gender and ICTs in rural/agricultural innovation Research design and methodologies Evaluation |
This member participated in the following Forums
المنتدى Communication for Development, community media and ICTs for family farming and rural development
Question 4 (opens 30 September)
Looking back at this post - Thu, 25/09/2014 - 10:10 by Ajit Maru (GFAR Secretariat)~~However, I would like to point out that while there is a lot of documentation and anecdotal information available on the potential use of ICTs to improve family farming based on pilot projects, as provided in this forum also, there is very little hard evidence on the impact and sustainability of these projects as also what has been the learning from almost 20 years of our experience in the use of the “new” ICTs such as computers and cellular telephony, for agricultural development.
I think the Question 1 comment that Ajit posted is quite relevant here in the discussion of policy. I believe there is a lack of outcome and impact assessment work in e-agriculture. Models/methodologies from other agricultural R&D do not transfer well to ICTs. Likewise telecoms/ICT studies are mostly adoption studies - fairly limited in determining development outcomes and impact. Work by leading international bodies (OECD, World Bank, etc.) is too "macro". Work at the local level is too anecdotal and qualitative methods will go so far for policymakers (but I firmly believe quantiative/econometric analysis alone is insufficient without qualitative, user-oriented data collection methods).
So in other words, there is a "catch 22" evidence based decision making for e-agriculture is demanded by policy makers and yet there has been little investment in this area.
Around the world, we are dealing with issue (hence the importance of baseline data collection in a project or sharing M&E info) . Just to say that in work here in Ontario this is also a huge issue - an example of what's happening in rural Canada see: http://swiftnetwork.ca/
Helen
Question 3 (opens 26 September)
I agree with the above list of the obstacles: availability, access, affordability, relevance which includes timeliness, trustworthiness, and usefulness of the content - and then the range of behavioural and social considerations that influence how smallholder farmers make effective use of ICTs and the information/knowledge that can be mobilized on them. The other obstacle I would add based on our experiences with research is TIME. Farmer time to access and use ICTs. A couple examples:
- in Ontario, Canada we found that farm women are true knowledge multitaskers in the family who act as infomediaries - going online to source and send farm related info - complete online forms, arguee the telecoms billing, etc. Women who work off-farm may also use their job-based access to higher speed internet to access online farm-related info; in contrast male farm operators spend less time online and report feeling frustrated with online info access - their preference (not from the studies we've done - only anecdotal - is speed dial on their cell phones to other farmers/agricultural representatives)
- in field studies my students and I have done in Sri Lanka, Ghana and Bangladesh, TIME has been cited as a factor for farmer access to information,, particularly time to participate in listening clubs, communicate with other farmers/seek out and visit NGOs etc.
In your experiences, since agriculture is typically hands-on, field-based work, time can be a genuine obstacle to smallholder farmers' uptake and use of ICTs in agriculture? Those in the costly field of "precision agriculture" (use of high tech, data intensive tools in agriculture) recognize time as a major obstacle (and selling point for "smart agriculture" applications).
Helen
Question 2 (opens 24 September)
Greetings from the University of Guelph! I've enjoyed reading the posts on this discussion question 2. Thanks Alberto for the super example of Esoko.com -- also for the new LEI-WUR report Bart!
Something to add ...
Well this week our research project in Sri Lanka on Mobilizing Knowledge for Sustainable Agriculture using ICTs and Open Source Software has been busy. What's happening is a series of field pilot studies termed as “campaigns”, involving agriculture communities and conducted in the Kurunegala, Matale, and Batticaloa Districts in Sri Lanka. Farmers identified various knowledge mobilization activities, ranging from exchanging local crop price information, to alerting on elephant attack, to disease control, general inquiries, announcements, so on and so forth. This presentation will discuss the insights gained as well as challenges faced by the research team in carrying out the campaigns, with a view to developing a better understanding of key factors of partnership development for promoting inclusive innovation among these communities of practice. You can get project info/updates on the blog:
As well in this project we're finalizing our report on experiences among rural radio stations in Sri Lanka including important changes affecting farm/rural narrowcasting due to emerging new forms of digital radio broadcasting. Radio+ is a game changer but not without its challenges which I'll post on discussion question 3 (radio plus = conventional radio narrowcasting/broadcasting plus use of digital/mobile technologies as well as technologies including open source software that change broadcaster-listener/listening groups interactions).