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dc.contributor.authorBarrett, Christopher B.en_US
dc.date.accessioned2005-12-01T00:00:01Zen_US
dc.date.available2005-12-01T00:00:01Zen_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10947/3908en_US
dc.titlePoverty Traps and Agricultural Research : Improving Policies, Institutions and Technologies to Support Sustainable Poverty Reductionen_US
dcterms.abstractThe document, presented by Christopher B. Barrett, Cornell University, discusses the challenge of improving policy and institutional innovation for poverty reduction. The poverty traps concept is considered in relation to six key features namely a focus on dynamics, multiple dynamic equilibrium, risk matters, exclusionary mechanisms, multi-dimensionality, and feedback effects across scales of analysis. A dynamic and multidimensional approach to poverty has implications for agricultural research and development including the need for an asset based approach an emphasis on productivity growth and the use of systems thinking. These ideas are illustrated by two case studies from the East Africa Rangelands and the Highlands of Kenya and Madagascar. The role the CGIAR can play in both biophysical and social science research in sustainable poverty reduction is also considered in relation to the poverty traps conceptualization. The paper was discussed at the Stakeholder Meeting at AGM2005.en_US
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Accessen_US
dcterms.issued2005-12-01en_US
dcterms.languageenen_US
dcterms.typeInternal Documenten_US
cg.subject.systemAgricultural researchen_US
cg.subject.systemPolicyen_US
cg.subject.systemPoverty reductionen_US
cg.subject.systemInstitutional strategiesen_US
cg.subject.systemCGIAR Meeting 2005/12en_US


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