Convergence of sciences: the management of agricultural research for small-scale farmers in Benin and Ghana
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NJAS - Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences
Abstract
The Convergence of Sciences programme (CoS) addresses the sub-optimal impact of science on the
livelihoods of resource-poor farmers in West Africa, particularly in Benin and Ghana where it operates.
CoS aims to develop insights into the pathways through which investment in science and technology can
improve rural lives. To this end, CoS features participatory experimental and action research by eight
PhD students, who each develop technologies and institutional arrangements with groups of farmers.
The ninth PhD student carries out comparative 'research on agricultural research'. The current article
deals with a higher aggregation level than the individual project: the management of the programme as
a whole. How did CoS try to zero in on the small windows of opportunity West African farmers face?
How did it manage the ensuing issues of trans-disciplinarity, and of interaction among students, (social
and natural science) supervisors, and other key stakeholders? How does it face up to the issues that
arise with respect to scaling up? One of the most interesting aspects of CoS is that it not only deals with
technical innovation within the constraining institutional and policy framework conditions, but also
experiments with incipient ideas about how to stretch them.