Contradictions between commercializing seeds, empowering smallholders farmers, and promoting biodiversity in Ghana: Seed policy within a historical framework
Date
2024
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elementa Science of Anthropocene
Abstract
This article critically examines the agricultural development agenda of promoting commercialization and
sustainable intensification and contrasts this with farmers’ own priorities, with case studies drawn from
the maize and cocoa sectors in Ghana. The study investigates the relationship between agricultural
development paradigms, seed breeding strategies, and the commercialization of agriculture from the 1950s
to present. It returns to the debates of farming systems research, the appropriation of the agricultural
varieties of farmers within the South by Northern agribusiness, and Paul Richards’ framework of an
Indigenous African agricultural revolution rooted in the experimental traditions of farmers to establish
a critical framework for examining the commodification of seeds. It focuses on the contradictions between
maintaining biodiversity, fashioning high-yielding proprietary seeds, and promoting farmer participation that
became manifest in the framework of farming systems research. It argues that commercial pressures have
prioritized yields and the protection of proprietary varieties over biodiversity in policy frameworks. This
contrast with farmers’ own concerns with adapting varieties to the conditions on their farms through their
own experimentation, and maintaining a diversity of changing genetic materials including those drawn from
certified varieties. This enables farmers to hedge against risk, disease, and pest attacks, while selecting
varietal materials that optimize yields in the particular agroecological conditions of their farms. Although
social participation is still upheld as an important value in liberal market agrarian policies, there has been
a significant transformation in its usage. It no longer denotes farmer participation in the design of and
experimentation with technology, but participation in the consumption of the agricultural products of
agribusiness or in the agricultural technology treadmill. This contribution examines the implication of
smallholder agricultural commercialization for biodiversity and for the dynamism and vitality of local
farming systems.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Plant breeding, Sustainable intensification, Agrobiodiversity
Citation
Amanor, KS. 2024. Contradictions between commercializing seeds, empowering smallholders farmers, and promoting biodiversity in Ghana: Seed policy within a historical framework. Elem Sci Anth, 12: 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1525/elementa.2023.00004