Author:
Roth Christian H,Cosijn Michaela,Carter Lucy,Chakraborty Arnab,Das Mahanambrota,Hamilton Serena H,Kumar Jana Alak,Lim-Camacho Lilly,Majumdar Subrata,Merritt Wendy S,Mishra Pulak,Mishra Rajeshwar,Nidumolu Uday,Rahman Md Wakilur,Ray Dhananjay,Williams Liana J
Abstract
Abstract
We describe a research-for-development (R4D) strategy developed to address how investments and interventions in agricultural intensification as a means to achieve community development can be designed to be more socially inclusive and equitable. We draw on results from a 5-year project – Promoting socially inclusive and sustainable agricultural intensification in West Bengal (India) and southern Bangladesh (SIAGI). We reflect on a major pivot in the project’s strategy, from being primarily research-driven to placing community concerns and priorities at the centre with a shift towards Ethical Community Engagement (ECE). This became the foundational framework which guided the definition and undertaking of all subsequent activities – including a rethink of methods and concepts to develop tools and frameworks fit for purpose and local context, and inculcating a culture of reflexivity and mutual learning in the project. We show that creating the conditions for true participation, where project beneficiaries and non-government organizations are equal partners alongside researchers and government actors, and for co-learning using the ECE framework, sets the foundations for increased and potentially enduring social inclusion in agricultural intensification.
Funder
Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
2 articles.
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