Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia

SPIA has developed a comprehensive, country-level approach to documenting the adoption and diffusion of agricultural innovations linked to CGIAR research. The first focal country for this approach is Ethiopia, where SPIA has been working since 2015. The approach involves three stages: Understanding the full range of recent CGIAR activities in the country by engaging with CGIAR researchers, science leaders and national stakeholders. In Ethiopia, this led to detailed documentation on 52 different CGIAR-related innovations from the past two decades related to the work of 10 CGIAR Centers and their partners, including the Ethiopian Institute for Agricultural Research (EIAR). Prioritizing among these candidate innovations and identifying those that can be observed in survey data or be subjected to new data collection approaches such as DNA fingerprinting or remote sensing. Methodological experiments and pilot tests of data collection approaches were used in Ethiopia to select the best data collection approach for each innovation. Working with partners – in the case of Ethiopia, the World Bank Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) team and the Ethiopian Central Statistics Agency (CSA) – to integrate these new data collection approaches into nationally representative surveys. For Ethiopia we integrated 18 such CGIAR-related innovations. In 2016 and 2019, SPIA supported the CSA to field the third and fourth rounds of the Ethiopian Socioeconomic Survey. The 2019 round included, for the first time, DNA fingerprinting of crop varieties, alongside detailed protocols for livestock and natural resource management. Using the DNA fingerprinting data we have been able to establish that CGIAR-derived germplasm is used by 19% of barley-cultivating households and 63% of maize-cultivating households. The nationally representative nature of the data reveals which innovations have scaled and where scaling has happened; the panel structure allows for an analysis of the trajectories that households are on when they adopt (or dis-adopt) specific innovations; and the rich socioeconomic data helps to understand who adopts – all crucial information to understand pathways to several of the CGIAR impact areas (such as gender equality, youth and social inclusion). CGIAR's contribution to Ethiopia’s agricultural development is complex and wide-ranging, and while some aspects cannot be captured by survey data, this new source of adoption and diffusion data, and the summary report that accompanies it, help to identify the scale and scope of CGIAR’s reach in Ethiopia. Looking ahead, SPIA’s experience in Ethiopia demonstrates the potential of this approach in other countries where CGIAR works.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kosmowski, Frederic, Alemu, Solomon, Mallia, Paola, Stevenson, James, Macours, Karen
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CGIAR Advisory Services 2020-10
Subjects:agricultural research, innovation adoption, impact assessment,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109997
https://cas.cgiar.org/spia/publications/shining-brighter-light-comprehensive-evidence-adoption-and-diffusion-cgiar
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-109997
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1099972023-02-15T01:48:12Z Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia Kosmowski, Frederic Alemu, Solomon Mallia, Paola Stevenson, James Macours, Karen agricultural research innovation adoption impact assessment SPIA has developed a comprehensive, country-level approach to documenting the adoption and diffusion of agricultural innovations linked to CGIAR research. The first focal country for this approach is Ethiopia, where SPIA has been working since 2015. The approach involves three stages: Understanding the full range of recent CGIAR activities in the country by engaging with CGIAR researchers, science leaders and national stakeholders. In Ethiopia, this led to detailed documentation on 52 different CGIAR-related innovations from the past two decades related to the work of 10 CGIAR Centers and their partners, including the Ethiopian Institute for Agricultural Research (EIAR). Prioritizing among these candidate innovations and identifying those that can be observed in survey data or be subjected to new data collection approaches such as DNA fingerprinting or remote sensing. Methodological experiments and pilot tests of data collection approaches were used in Ethiopia to select the best data collection approach for each innovation. Working with partners – in the case of Ethiopia, the World Bank Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) team and the Ethiopian Central Statistics Agency (CSA) – to integrate these new data collection approaches into nationally representative surveys. For Ethiopia we integrated 18 such CGIAR-related innovations. In 2016 and 2019, SPIA supported the CSA to field the third and fourth rounds of the Ethiopian Socioeconomic Survey. The 2019 round included, for the first time, DNA fingerprinting of crop varieties, alongside detailed protocols for livestock and natural resource management. Using the DNA fingerprinting data we have been able to establish that CGIAR-derived germplasm is used by 19% of barley-cultivating households and 63% of maize-cultivating households. The nationally representative nature of the data reveals which innovations have scaled and where scaling has happened; the panel structure allows for an analysis of the trajectories that households are on when they adopt (or dis-adopt) specific innovations; and the rich socioeconomic data helps to understand who adopts – all crucial information to understand pathways to several of the CGIAR impact areas (such as gender equality, youth and social inclusion). CGIAR's contribution to Ethiopia’s agricultural development is complex and wide-ranging, and while some aspects cannot be captured by survey data, this new source of adoption and diffusion data, and the summary report that accompanies it, help to identify the scale and scope of CGIAR’s reach in Ethiopia. Looking ahead, SPIA’s experience in Ethiopia demonstrates the potential of this approach in other countries where CGIAR works. 2020-10 2020-10-27T18:04:09Z 2020-10-27T18:04:09Z Report Kosmowski, F., Alemu, S., Mallia, P., Stevenson, J., Macours, K. (2020). Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-Related Innovations in Ethiopia. SPIA Synthesis Report. Rome: CGIAR Advisory Services https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109997 https://cas.cgiar.org/spia/publications/shining-brighter-light-comprehensive-evidence-adoption-and-diffusion-cgiar en SPIA Synthesis Report CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0 Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Advisory Services
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic agricultural research
innovation adoption
impact assessment
agricultural research
innovation adoption
impact assessment
spellingShingle agricultural research
innovation adoption
impact assessment
agricultural research
innovation adoption
impact assessment
Kosmowski, Frederic
Alemu, Solomon
Mallia, Paola
Stevenson, James
Macours, Karen
Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
description SPIA has developed a comprehensive, country-level approach to documenting the adoption and diffusion of agricultural innovations linked to CGIAR research. The first focal country for this approach is Ethiopia, where SPIA has been working since 2015. The approach involves three stages: Understanding the full range of recent CGIAR activities in the country by engaging with CGIAR researchers, science leaders and national stakeholders. In Ethiopia, this led to detailed documentation on 52 different CGIAR-related innovations from the past two decades related to the work of 10 CGIAR Centers and their partners, including the Ethiopian Institute for Agricultural Research (EIAR). Prioritizing among these candidate innovations and identifying those that can be observed in survey data or be subjected to new data collection approaches such as DNA fingerprinting or remote sensing. Methodological experiments and pilot tests of data collection approaches were used in Ethiopia to select the best data collection approach for each innovation. Working with partners – in the case of Ethiopia, the World Bank Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) team and the Ethiopian Central Statistics Agency (CSA) – to integrate these new data collection approaches into nationally representative surveys. For Ethiopia we integrated 18 such CGIAR-related innovations. In 2016 and 2019, SPIA supported the CSA to field the third and fourth rounds of the Ethiopian Socioeconomic Survey. The 2019 round included, for the first time, DNA fingerprinting of crop varieties, alongside detailed protocols for livestock and natural resource management. Using the DNA fingerprinting data we have been able to establish that CGIAR-derived germplasm is used by 19% of barley-cultivating households and 63% of maize-cultivating households. The nationally representative nature of the data reveals which innovations have scaled and where scaling has happened; the panel structure allows for an analysis of the trajectories that households are on when they adopt (or dis-adopt) specific innovations; and the rich socioeconomic data helps to understand who adopts – all crucial information to understand pathways to several of the CGIAR impact areas (such as gender equality, youth and social inclusion). CGIAR's contribution to Ethiopia’s agricultural development is complex and wide-ranging, and while some aspects cannot be captured by survey data, this new source of adoption and diffusion data, and the summary report that accompanies it, help to identify the scale and scope of CGIAR’s reach in Ethiopia. Looking ahead, SPIA’s experience in Ethiopia demonstrates the potential of this approach in other countries where CGIAR works.
format Report
topic_facet agricultural research
innovation adoption
impact assessment
author Kosmowski, Frederic
Alemu, Solomon
Mallia, Paola
Stevenson, James
Macours, Karen
author_facet Kosmowski, Frederic
Alemu, Solomon
Mallia, Paola
Stevenson, James
Macours, Karen
author_sort Kosmowski, Frederic
title Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
title_short Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
title_full Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Shining a Brighter Light: Comprehensive Evidence on Adoption and Diffusion of CGIAR-related Innovations in Ethiopia
title_sort shining a brighter light: comprehensive evidence on adoption and diffusion of cgiar-related innovations in ethiopia
publisher CGIAR Advisory Services
publishDate 2020-10
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109997
https://cas.cgiar.org/spia/publications/shining-brighter-light-comprehensive-evidence-adoption-and-diffusion-cgiar
work_keys_str_mv AT kosmowskifrederic shiningabrighterlightcomprehensiveevidenceonadoptionanddiffusionofcgiarrelatedinnovationsinethiopia
AT alemusolomon shiningabrighterlightcomprehensiveevidenceonadoptionanddiffusionofcgiarrelatedinnovationsinethiopia
AT malliapaola shiningabrighterlightcomprehensiveevidenceonadoptionanddiffusionofcgiarrelatedinnovationsinethiopia
AT stevensonjames shiningabrighterlightcomprehensiveevidenceonadoptionanddiffusionofcgiarrelatedinnovationsinethiopia
AT macourskaren shiningabrighterlightcomprehensiveevidenceonadoptionanddiffusionofcgiarrelatedinnovationsinethiopia
_version_ 1779051095931224064