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Making It Too Simple? Researchers, Recommendations, and NGOs in the Sundarbans, Indian West Bengalby Cathy Rozel Farnwortha,* and Mette Vaarstb http://dx.doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2012.024.001, pp. 137–146 Published online 16 July 2012; updated 11 September 2012
Abstract The authors are members of an international study team that conducted research on one of the islands making up the Sundarbans region of West Bengal in India in September 2008. This was at the request of two nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), one European and one Indian, which have partnered with each other to bring long-term development to this desperately poor area. The purpose of the research was to analyze existing agricultural practices and to develop recommendations for the two partner NGOs on how to work with farmers toward more sustainable, low-input farming systems that would contribute to poverty alleviation and simultaneously address some of the serious challenges of climate change affecting the lives of millions living in this low-lying region.
This paper brings together personal reflections by two members of the study team upon the research process and, more particularly, on the take-up of recommendations. The starting point for this paper is the observation that the recommendations were implemented by the two NGOs with more concern for meeting the needs of the NGOs, rather than the needs of the farmers the research was ultimately intended to serve. Follow-up visits after six and 18 months showed that an organic demonstration farm had been developed in preference to rolling out recommendations aimed at supporting change in farming practice on individual farms and on involving people with the most precarious livelihoods. The paper explores the bumpy nature of the relationship between the researchers, the two NGOs, and the intended ultimate beneficiaries.
Keywords: Indian West Bengal, interdisciplinary research, livelihoods, sustainable agriculture
Correction: This paper was updated on 11 September 2012 to remove two photographs included in the original, per the authors’ request.
Affiliations a,* Corresponding author: Freelance consultant on gender, agriculture, and value chains based in Germany; This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. b Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Aarhus University, P.O. Box 50, DK – 8830 Tjele, Denmark; +45 22901344;
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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Banner photos include a Cape Cod cranberry bog; a cranberry “screen house” used to grade fresh cranberries; farmland near Lake Placid, NY, in the Adirondack Mountains; Montmorency cherry trees on the Mission Peninsula of northern Michigan; the historic Round Barn in the South Mountain Apple Belt of Adams County, Pennsylvania; the “Sea of Grapes” district of the Lake Erie Concord Grape Belt, near Erie, Penn; a field of cabbages near Shortsville, NY, home to one of the world’s largest sauerkraut factories. All photos copyright by Duncan Hilchey.
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