Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey

In cooperation with researchers in many national agricultural research programs, CIMMYT has sought to develop procedures which help to focus agricultural research squarely on the needs of farmers. The process involves collaboration of biological scientists and economists to identify the groups of farmers for whom technologies are to be developed, determining their circumstances and problems, screening this information for research opportunities, and then implementing the resulting research program on experiment stations and on the fields of representative farmers. CIMMYT's Economics Program has emphasized developing procedures for the . first stage of this process, through to establishing research opportunities. The evolution of the procedures, now synthesized in a manual "Planning Technologies Appropriate to Farmers: Concepts and Procedures" has been strongly influenced by collaborative research with many national programs and with CIMMYT's wheat and maize training programs. Our efforts with national programs began in 1974 with Zaire's national maize program, then moved to work in Tunisia, Pakistan, and Egypt. The pace of work accelerated notably in 1976 with assignment of regional economists stimulating similar work in Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Panama, E1 Salvador, and India. Cooperation with still other national programs is now underway. We believe that the resulting procedures offer cost effective and robust guidelines to national programs. We are now preparing reports that illustrate the implementation of these procedures in various national programs. While not all such work can ·be reported, we take this opportunity to thank all of those who have collaborated with us. This report describes work undertaken with the Ghanaian maize program in an important maize producing region. It emphasizes the exploratory survey -- undertaken by Ghanaian and CIMMYT professionals -- and relates information gathered in the survey to several apparently promising lines of research for improved maize technologies.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bruce, K., Byerlee, D., Edmeades, G.O.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 1980
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, FALLOW SYSTEMS, FARMERS, FERTILIZERS, RAIN,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/709
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-7092021-03-31T14:21:15Z Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey Bruce, K. Byerlee, D. Edmeades, G.O. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY FALLOW SYSTEMS FARMERS FERTILIZERS RAIN FALLOW SYSTEMS FARMERS FERTILIZERS RAIN In cooperation with researchers in many national agricultural research programs, CIMMYT has sought to develop procedures which help to focus agricultural research squarely on the needs of farmers. The process involves collaboration of biological scientists and economists to identify the groups of farmers for whom technologies are to be developed, determining their circumstances and problems, screening this information for research opportunities, and then implementing the resulting research program on experiment stations and on the fields of representative farmers. CIMMYT's Economics Program has emphasized developing procedures for the . first stage of this process, through to establishing research opportunities. The evolution of the procedures, now synthesized in a manual "Planning Technologies Appropriate to Farmers: Concepts and Procedures" has been strongly influenced by collaborative research with many national programs and with CIMMYT's wheat and maize training programs. Our efforts with national programs began in 1974 with Zaire's national maize program, then moved to work in Tunisia, Pakistan, and Egypt. The pace of work accelerated notably in 1976 with assignment of regional economists stimulating similar work in Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Panama, E1 Salvador, and India. Cooperation with still other national programs is now underway. We believe that the resulting procedures offer cost effective and robust guidelines to national programs. We are now preparing reports that illustrate the implementation of these procedures in various national programs. While not all such work can ·be reported, we take this opportunity to thank all of those who have collaborated with us. This report describes work undertaken with the Ghanaian maize program in an important maize producing region. It emphasizes the exploratory survey -- undertaken by Ghanaian and CIMMYT professionals -- and relates information gathered in the survey to several apparently promising lines of research for improved maize technologies. 27 pages 2012-01-06T04:34:47Z 2012-01-06T04:34:47Z 1980 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/10883/709 English CIMMYT Economics Working Paper CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Mexico CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
Bruce, K.
Byerlee, D.
Edmeades, G.O.
Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
description In cooperation with researchers in many national agricultural research programs, CIMMYT has sought to develop procedures which help to focus agricultural research squarely on the needs of farmers. The process involves collaboration of biological scientists and economists to identify the groups of farmers for whom technologies are to be developed, determining their circumstances and problems, screening this information for research opportunities, and then implementing the resulting research program on experiment stations and on the fields of representative farmers. CIMMYT's Economics Program has emphasized developing procedures for the . first stage of this process, through to establishing research opportunities. The evolution of the procedures, now synthesized in a manual "Planning Technologies Appropriate to Farmers: Concepts and Procedures" has been strongly influenced by collaborative research with many national programs and with CIMMYT's wheat and maize training programs. Our efforts with national programs began in 1974 with Zaire's national maize program, then moved to work in Tunisia, Pakistan, and Egypt. The pace of work accelerated notably in 1976 with assignment of regional economists stimulating similar work in Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Panama, E1 Salvador, and India. Cooperation with still other national programs is now underway. We believe that the resulting procedures offer cost effective and robust guidelines to national programs. We are now preparing reports that illustrate the implementation of these procedures in various national programs. While not all such work can ·be reported, we take this opportunity to thank all of those who have collaborated with us. This report describes work undertaken with the Ghanaian maize program in an important maize producing region. It emphasizes the exploratory survey -- undertaken by Ghanaian and CIMMYT professionals -- and relates information gathered in the survey to several apparently promising lines of research for improved maize technologies.
format Working Paper
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
FALLOW SYSTEMS
FARMERS
FERTILIZERS
RAIN
author Bruce, K.
Byerlee, D.
Edmeades, G.O.
author_facet Bruce, K.
Byerlee, D.
Edmeades, G.O.
author_sort Bruce, K.
title Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
title_short Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
title_full Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
title_fullStr Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
title_full_unstemmed Maize in the Mampong-Sekodumasi area of Ghana: results of an exploratory survey
title_sort maize in the mampong-sekodumasi area of ghana: results of an exploratory survey
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 1980
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/709
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