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Agricultural Productivity Programme for Southern Africa (APPSA) Annual Report January-December 2015

Type
File
Date of Publication
Dec 01, 2015
Description/Abstract

This technical progress report covers the period from 1 January to 31 December 2015, and is intended to provide an update on key achievements during the reporting period. Implementation of the project activities at national and at regional level followed the three components, namely, (a) Technology Generation and Dissemination, (b) Strengthening of Regional Centres of Leadership and (c) Coordination and Facilitation. Regional coordination and facilitation activities were elaborated in the annual work plan that was developed by CCARDESA and endorsed by the implementing countries. The key activities in the work plan included Regional Review and Strategic Meetings, Technical backstopping and Networking, Monitoring and Evaluation, Facilitation of Information-sharing Platforms, Trainings and Workshops, Policy Harmonization and Advocacy. The country work plans were approved by the respective national steering committees.

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

CCARDESA, APPSA. Agricultural Productivity Programme for Southern Africa (APPSA) Annual Report January-December 2015. (2015). p.55.

Agricultural Productivity Programme for Southern Africa (APPSA) Annual Report 2014

Type
File
Date of Publication
Dec 01, 2014
Description/Abstract

This is the first technical progress report for the project and it covers the period from 1 July 2013 to 31 December 2014. The report is intended to provide an abridged update on key deliverables during the reporting period. Sequential reports will follow the agreed reporting cycle, i.e. semi-annual reports covering the activities of each semester (Jan to June and July to December).

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

CCARDESA, APPSA. (2014). Agricultural Productivity Programme for Southern Africa (APPSA). p35.

Harnessing the potential of diverse intensification pathways for Food and Nutrition Security and Sustainable Agriculture - Outline for a long-term EU-Africa Research and Innovation Partnership

Date of Publication
Mar 01, 2017
Description/Abstract

The PROIntensAfrica project demonstrates the potential of the diversity of pathways for sustainable intensification in agri-food systems. It identifies future challenges for science and innovation to address. It documentates the salient characteristics of a successfull bi-continental research and innovation partnership, and drafts an outline for such partnerships.

Author or Institution as Author
Seerp Wigboldus
Co-authors

participants of a write shop

Institution
PROIntensAfrica
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Wigboldus, S. 2017. Harnessing the potential of diverse intensification pathways for Food and Nutrition Security and Sustainable Agriculture - Outline for a long-term EU-Africa Research and Innovation Partnership, PROIntenseAfrica, EU

CCARDESA 2015 Annual Report

Type
File
Date of Publication
Nov 01, 2015
Description/Abstract

The CCARDESA 2015 Work plan devoted attention to driving activities initiated in previous years, particularly 2014.The operational momentum of activities was built up throughout 2014 with the awarding of CCARDESA supported research grants and implementation of a total of 69 projects. Therefore, the focus in 2015 was on accelerating the implementation of these activities including those identified as quick wins or low hanging fruits in the CCARDESA Medium Term Operational Plan (MTOP)

This report highlights the key achievements for CCARDESA in 2015. It is organised around the four thematic areas and cross-cutting themes that are of priority to the region. These four thematic Areas are: (1) Farmer Empowerment and Market Access; (2) Research and Technology Generation and Farmer Demanddriven Advisory Services and Innovation Systems; (3) Knowledge, Information and Communication; and (4) Institutional Development and Capacity Building. Under a resource-constrained environment facing R&D institutions globally, emphasis in 2015 was strategically directed at innovative implementation of regional activities across all the thematic areas.

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

CCARDESA, CCARDESA2015 Annual Report, (2015). pp.20.

The Status of Agricultural Information, Communication and Knowledge Management in southern Africa

Type
File
Date of Publication
Mar 01, 2015
Description/Abstract

This resource is a regional report giving a general status of how agricultural information is being communicated in the region. It synthesizes reports which were developed by 12 SADC member states. The status is an attempt to inform development initiatives which are meant to support agricultural information communication and knowledge management in the region.

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Co-authors

Dydimus Zengenene

Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Zengenene, D. 2017. The Status of Agricultural Information, Communication and Knowledge Management in southern Africa, CCARDESA, Gaborone

African leafy vegetables in South Africa

Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2007
Description/Abstract

In this article the term ‘African leafy vegetables’ was adopted to refer to the collective of plant species which are used as leafy vegetables and which are referred to as morogo or imifino by African people in South Africa. Function is central in this indigenous concept, which is subject to spatial and temporal variability in terms of plant species that are included as a result of diversity in ecology, culinary repertoire and change over time. As a result, the concept embraces indigenous, indigenised and recently introduced leafy vegetable species but this article is concerned mainly with the indigenous and indigenised species. In South Africa, the collection of these two types of leafy vegetables from the wild, or from cultivated fields where some of them grow as weeds, has a long history that has been intimately linked to women and their traditional livelihood tasks. Among poor people in remote rural areas the use of these types of leafy vegetables is still common but nationwide there is evidence of decline, particularly in urban areas. Cultivation of indigenous or indigenised leafy vegetables is restricted to a narrow group of primarily indigenised species in South Africa. Seven groups of indigenous or indigenised African leafy vegetables that are important in South Africa were given special attention and their local nomenclature, ecology, use and cultivation are discussed.

Author or Institution as Author
WS Jansen van Rensburg
Co-authors

W van Averbeke, R Slabbert, M Faber, P van Jaarsveld, I van Heerden, F Wenhold and A Oelofse

Institution
South African Water Research Commission
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

JANSEN VAN RENSBURG W.S., VAN AVERBEKE W., SLABBERT R., FABER M., VAN JAARSVELD P., VAN HEERDEN S.M., WENHOLD F. & OELOFSE A., 2007. African leafy vegetables in South Africa. Water SA 33: 317-326

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