What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation

CGIAR consists of a network of international publicly funded agricultural research for development institutes. Over five decades it has worked to increase food abundance, reduce hunger and poverty rates, and lower the geographical footprint of agriculture in lower- and middle-income countries. CGIAR's first formalised research program on climate change was set up in 2009. Here we report on an analysis of 300 outcomes generated over the lifetime of this program, which ran until 2021. Outcomes were characterised in relation to the climate objective, geography, thematic scope, and contribution to global goals. More than half of the outcomes analysed were related to policies for agriculture development under climate change. Twenty-six percent of outcomes related to climate, information and financial services, and 22 percent were related to organisational programming. Most outcomes analysed were at an early stage of maturity, focusing on design and planning stages of policies, strategies, and investments. Fewer than five percent of outcomes had evidence of impact at scale. Outcomes were facilitated by a wide network of partners and contributed to more than ten Sustainable Development Goals. The results of the analysis show the value of outcome-oriented science in being able to harness diversity, balance strategy with opportunism, plan flexibly, work across multiple vulnerability contexts, and allocate resources towards outcomes. These elements have played a significant role in fostering change across contexts, in adjusting research to emerging needs and context changes, in creating conditions for spillovers, and in ensuring global relevance. To transform the food system, the research for development agenda needs to be bolder. It will require more outcomes of various types, achieved through diverse partnerships, spanning a diversity of geographies, vulnerable contexts, and priorities. Significant and intentional investments in strengthening monitoring, evaluation, reporting and learning capacity will be required to further realize the potential for outcome-oriented research.

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Main Authors: Nowak, Andreea C., Cramer, Laura K., Schutz, Tonja, Poulos, Allison, Yuling Chang, Thornton, Philip K.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2022-12
Subjects:climate change, agriculture, cgiar, adaptation, mitigation, cambio climático, agricultoras, adaptación, outcome harvest,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126234
https://doi.org/10.1177/00307270221141455
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1262342023-09-15T12:09:16Z What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation Nowak, Andreea C. Cramer, Laura K. Schutz, Tonja Poulos, Allison Yuling Chang Thornton, Philip K. climate change agriculture cgiar adaptation mitigation cambio climático agricultoras adaptación outcome harvest CGIAR consists of a network of international publicly funded agricultural research for development institutes. Over five decades it has worked to increase food abundance, reduce hunger and poverty rates, and lower the geographical footprint of agriculture in lower- and middle-income countries. CGIAR's first formalised research program on climate change was set up in 2009. Here we report on an analysis of 300 outcomes generated over the lifetime of this program, which ran until 2021. Outcomes were characterised in relation to the climate objective, geography, thematic scope, and contribution to global goals. More than half of the outcomes analysed were related to policies for agriculture development under climate change. Twenty-six percent of outcomes related to climate, information and financial services, and 22 percent were related to organisational programming. Most outcomes analysed were at an early stage of maturity, focusing on design and planning stages of policies, strategies, and investments. Fewer than five percent of outcomes had evidence of impact at scale. Outcomes were facilitated by a wide network of partners and contributed to more than ten Sustainable Development Goals. The results of the analysis show the value of outcome-oriented science in being able to harness diversity, balance strategy with opportunism, plan flexibly, work across multiple vulnerability contexts, and allocate resources towards outcomes. These elements have played a significant role in fostering change across contexts, in adjusting research to emerging needs and context changes, in creating conditions for spillovers, and in ensuring global relevance. To transform the food system, the research for development agenda needs to be bolder. It will require more outcomes of various types, achieved through diverse partnerships, spanning a diversity of geographies, vulnerable contexts, and priorities. Significant and intentional investments in strengthening monitoring, evaluation, reporting and learning capacity will be required to further realize the potential for outcome-oriented research. 2022-12 2022-12-22T08:49:50Z 2022-12-22T08:49:50Z Journal Article Nowak, A.C.; Cramer, L.; Schuetz, T.; Poulos, A.; Chang, Y.; Thornton, P. (2022) What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation. Outlook on Agriculture 51(4) p. 423-434 ISSN: 0030-7270 0030-7270 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126234 https://doi.org/10.1177/00307270221141455 en CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access 423-434 application/pdf SAGE Publications Outlook on Agriculture
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 climate change
agriculture
cgiar
adaptation
mitigation
cambio climático
agricultoras
adaptación
outcome harvest
climate change
agriculture
cgiar
adaptation
mitigation
cambio climático
agricultoras
adaptación
outcome harvest
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
cgiar
adaptation
mitigation
cambio climático
agricultoras
adaptación
outcome harvest
climate change
agriculture
cgiar
adaptation
mitigation
cambio climático
agricultoras
adaptación
outcome harvest
Nowak, Andreea C.
Cramer, Laura K.
Schutz, Tonja
Poulos, Allison
Yuling Chang
Thornton, Philip K.
What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
description CGIAR consists of a network of international publicly funded agricultural research for development institutes. Over five decades it has worked to increase food abundance, reduce hunger and poverty rates, and lower the geographical footprint of agriculture in lower- and middle-income countries. CGIAR's first formalised research program on climate change was set up in 2009. Here we report on an analysis of 300 outcomes generated over the lifetime of this program, which ran until 2021. Outcomes were characterised in relation to the climate objective, geography, thematic scope, and contribution to global goals. More than half of the outcomes analysed were related to policies for agriculture development under climate change. Twenty-six percent of outcomes related to climate, information and financial services, and 22 percent were related to organisational programming. Most outcomes analysed were at an early stage of maturity, focusing on design and planning stages of policies, strategies, and investments. Fewer than five percent of outcomes had evidence of impact at scale. Outcomes were facilitated by a wide network of partners and contributed to more than ten Sustainable Development Goals. The results of the analysis show the value of outcome-oriented science in being able to harness diversity, balance strategy with opportunism, plan flexibly, work across multiple vulnerability contexts, and allocate resources towards outcomes. These elements have played a significant role in fostering change across contexts, in adjusting research to emerging needs and context changes, in creating conditions for spillovers, and in ensuring global relevance. To transform the food system, the research for development agenda needs to be bolder. It will require more outcomes of various types, achieved through diverse partnerships, spanning a diversity of geographies, vulnerable contexts, and priorities. Significant and intentional investments in strengthening monitoring, evaluation, reporting and learning capacity will be required to further realize the potential for outcome-oriented research.
format Journal Article
topic_facet climate change
agriculture
cgiar
adaptation
mitigation
cambio climático
agricultoras
adaptación
outcome harvest
author Nowak, Andreea C.
Cramer, Laura K.
Schutz, Tonja
Poulos, Allison
Yuling Chang
Thornton, Philip K.
author_facet Nowak, Andreea C.
Cramer, Laura K.
Schutz, Tonja
Poulos, Allison
Yuling Chang
Thornton, Philip K.
author_sort Nowak, Andreea C.
title What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
title_short What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
title_full What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
title_fullStr What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
title_full_unstemmed What does CGIAR do to address climate change? Perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
title_sort what does cgiar do to address climate change? perspectives from a decade of science on climate change adaptation and mitigation
publisher SAGE Publications
publishDate 2022-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126234
https://doi.org/10.1177/00307270221141455
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