Karin Nichterlein
| Organization | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) |
|---|---|
| Organization type | International Organization |
| Country | Italy |
Dr. Karin Nichterlein, Agricultural Research Officer, at FAO, has been working in agricultural research for almost 30 years, in Germany, Zambia and for two international organizations in Africa, Asia and Central and Eastern Europe. Her current interest covers agricultural innovation systems, agricultural research policy and institutional capacity building, including biotechnology and biosafety, information communication technologies in research and extension.
This member participated in the following Forums
Forum Forum: "Using ICT to enable Agricultural Innovation Systems for smallholders" September, 2012
Question 1 (opens 17 Sept.)
I am Karin Nichterlein, Agricultural Research Officer, Research and Extension Branch, FAO, Rome, Italy. The comments so far have shown the vast and various ICT innovations that have been developed to help farmers access and exchange information they need through various service providers. It is true that different access to ICTs must be considered for the best form of adoption to engage farmers along with documenting and disseminating issues and innovations experienced by farmers. As it has been mentioned, the use of ICTs is very diverse in rural areas in regards to the different medias such as rural radio, mobile phones and internet. ICTs provide the possibility for farmers and stakeholders to share their experiences, to improve practices, learn from each other, as well as provide linkages to different markets and information. Wide use of mobile phones and internet may be difficult in some rural areas due to limited literacy, low level of connectivity and/or high costs. Here, intermediaries with skills and access to ICTs play a role in letting farmers benefit from ICTs.
In response to these particular aspects, I would like to introduce the Technologies and Practices for Small Agricultural Producers (TECA) platform that combines a knowledge repository with a tool for discussions (please see: http://teca.fao.org). TECA has been developed by FAO to facilitate access to practical information that can benefit small producers around the world. Through the knowledge repository information on applied technologies and practices can be accessed from partner organizations agreeing to share their descriptions on TECA. The focus is on concrete technologies presented in a non-academic, simple and descriptive language, complemented by photos, presentations and videos. Users or intermediaries can leave comments for sharing similar experiences or posting questions. An additional tool is the online forums, or Exchange Groups, where members can enquire a community of practitioners about a specific agricultural technology or practice, and at the same time share their own experiences with other members looking for support.
In regards to intermediaries providing ICT services, I would like to share with you information about recent initiatives of one of TECA’s partners, the Grameen Foundation Uganda’s Local Knowledge Project (http://teca.fao.org/partner/grameen-foundation). Through a network of 800 community knowledge workers based at village level in different regions of Uganda, local practices in agriculture - often communicated only verbally across communities and generations - are collected and documented, translated into English and shared for discussion and feedback with members of an Exchange Group on TECA. The community knowledge workers are equipped with smart phones which they use to capture farmers’ local innovations. These experiences, together with the contributions and comments from the TECA platform are then compiled into a comprehensive document that is shared with farmers and other stakeholders through various channels of communication. Another initiative, is the establishment of a call centre by Grameen Uganda, where farmers can receive advice by experts in local languages. The TECA platform is one of the sources from which they draw information for their advisory services.
We have seen in this discussion forum many exciting examples of using ICTs for farmers, but need to keep in mind that the successful implementation of ICTs to benefit farmers requires a careful assessment of many factors including information needs of various farmer groups, capacities of farmers or intermediaries, communication culture, costs, available resources etc.
Forum Forum: "Building the CIARD Framework for Data and Information Sharing" April, 2011
Question 3: What are the emerging tools, standards and infrastructures?
Kind regards
Karin Nichterlein
FAO, Research and Extension Branch