65 nRead IIED’s blog on the event at: www.iied.org/agricultural-developmentbusiness-usual-not-option nRead more on the Food We Want website: http://tinyurl.com/fww-launch Full URL: www.foodwewant.org/eng/News/FoodWe-Want-Sustainable-Local-Fair-colourfullylaunched-in-the-UK nFor information on PENHA see: www.penhanetwork.org Democratising agricultural research IIED and its partners have been facilitating an inclusive process of farmer deliberation on what kind of agricultural research small-scale farmers and food processors want (www.excludedvoices.org). This is being carried out in the Andean Altiplano of South America, South Asia, West Asia and West Africa. As part of this multiregional process, a series of citizens’ juries was held in Mali over the last six years. Their aim was to allow ordinary farmers and other food producers, both men and women, to present and discuss their priorities on the governance of agricultural research in West Africa, and make policy recommendations. The farmer jurors made over 100 recommendations after crossexamining expert witnesses. It was recognised that there was a need for diversity and an inclusive agenda that puts Farmer specialists at the citizens’ juries on Democratising agricultural research, Mali small farmers at the centre. In the followup to this unique and deliberative process, West African farmers asked to have an open High Level Policy Dialogue with the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) and its main donors. This took place in Accra, Ghana in February this year, chaired by the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Professor Olivier de Schutter. There were about 100 people present – among them 22 participants from AGRA, including its President, the President of ROPPA, 26 West African farmers (men and women), about 20 farmers from other regions affected by the first Green Revolution, and three indigenous peoples from Thailand.2 There was a video link up with the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Agroecology at the UK Houses of Parliament, which enabled the participants in Accra to dialogue with staff from the UK Department for International Development, MPs and civil society members. Despite some technical hitches with the sound, the participants felt that the policy dialogue set an important precedent for policy-making on the governance of agricultural research for development in West Africa, bringing hitherto marginalised views of farmers to the table. nDownload the photo story at http://pubs.iied.org/G03349.html. See also: Democratising agricultural research for food Photos: Khanh Tran-Thanh 222 2 Le Réseau des Organisations Paysannes et de Producteurs de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (Network of Farmers’ and Agricultural Producers).

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