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Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique Ranjitha Puskur Workshop on “Creating a people and outcome focused M&E system For imGoats”, Udaipur, India, 14-18 February 2011
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Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

May 27, 2015

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Lance Robinson

Presented by Ranjitha Puskur at the Workshop on “Creating a people and outcome focused M&E system
For imGoats”, Udaipur, India, 14-18 February 2011
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Page 1: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of

India and Mozambique

Ranjitha Puskur

Workshop on “Creating a people and outcome focused M&E systemFor imGoats”, Udaipur, India, 14-18 February 2011

Page 2: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

GoalTo increase incomes and food

security in a sustainable manner by enhancing pro-poor small ruminant value chains in India and Mozambique

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Page 3: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Purpose

To transform goat production and marketing from an ad hoc, risky, informal activity to a sound and profitable enterprise and model that taps into a growing market, largely controlled by and benefiting women and other disadvantaged and vulnerable groups.

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Page 4: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Objectives• To pilot sustainable and replicable

organizational and technical models to strengthen goat value chains in India and Mozambique that increase incomes, reduce vulnerability and enhance welfare amongst marginalized groups, including women

• To document, communicate and promote appropriate evidence-based model(s) for sustainable, pro-poor goat value chains

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Page 5: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

– Value Chains, Innovation Platforms and Producer Hubs

– Learning-oriented M&E

Proposed approach

Page 6: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Inputs & Services

Production Processing MarketingConsumer

s

What do we understand as a value chain?

•Activities, actors and relationships to bring a product through the phases of production and marketing for delivery to customers

•Purpose is to provide a product of value to customer for which he is willing to pay

•Value distributed back along the value chain

•Flexible scope, boundaries

•Driven by opportunities to add value

Page 7: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

“Process in which all types of knowledge (not just scientific and technology) are applied to achieve desired social and economic outcomes”

Technological Institutional (way things are routinely

done) Organisational Policy

What is innovation?

Page 8: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Innovation

• Emerges from multiple interactions and joint learning among individuals and organizations – possessing different types of

knowledge

– within a particular social, economic, political, policy and institutional context

• Innovation processes can be enhanced by creating more possibilities for actors to interact - (key actors along the value chain – innovation platforms)

Page 9: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

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Why do we need to pay attention to innovation as a

process?

Farmer adopting integrated system

R&D

Technology

Bulker

Goat Value Chain

‘PULL’

Retailmarkets

Supermarkets

Restaurants

Processor

Veterinary services

Breeds

Feeds

Knowledge

Market Information

Credit

Policy

Organisational

‘PUSH’

Page 10: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

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Why do we need to pay attention to innovation as a

process?

How do we get all of these actors working together

to identify problems and co-create solutions

as the value chains evolve?

Page 11: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Innovation platforms• a fluid entity - evolving membership, drawing

in relevant expertise depending on the problem being addressed

• facilitate dialogue between the main local players in the value chain

• identify bottlenecks and opportunities in production, marketing and the policy environment

• identify market requirements (quantity, quality, and the timing of sales)

• analyse existing production strategies

• identify and implement technologies to improve production to fulfill market demand

Page 12: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

• A hub is a dynamic cluster of services and activities that generate greater income for goat farmers through:– Meat and milk sale– Purchase of inputs and services (feed, vet

services, breeding, etc..)– Possibility to save and get credit (“village

banks”)– Access to training and information

• The hub approach has been used with other commodities (coffee, cashew nuts) but works best when regular inputs/services are required and production is recurrent

The HUB approach

Page 13: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

• not a fixed method, approach or specific process

• the conceptualisation and practice needs to go beyond methods or approaches to include changes of personal skills, mindsets and attitudes, organisational practices and culture, and the ways in which organisations interact as part of the wider “innovation system”

What this approach is not..

Page 14: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Outputs• 1.1 Diagnosed technical and capacity needs and

opportunities and final jointly-developed strategy for addressing them

• 1.2 Stakeholder Innovation Platforms (IPs) established, with key stakeholders and women playing a significant role

• 1.3 Producer Hubs established, with women playing a significant role, and delivering demand-led packages of interventions and capacity building (animal health, animal production, breeding, crop-livestock and natural resource management, business development, marketing, value addition, innovation capacity)

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Page 15: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Outputs• 2.1 Lessons for sustainable goat value chain

development models clearly identified through evidence-based research and participatory approaches

• 2.2 Opportunities for scaling up and out communicated through advocacy activity with partners and through project exit strategy

• 3.1 Processes established and implemented for adaptive learning through M&E and impact demonstrated through impact assessment exercises

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Page 16: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

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Producer Hubestablishment

Stakeholder engagement

Communication

Research and

Learning

Innovation Platformestablishment

M&EImpact assessment

Outputs

2 Years

Page 17: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

• India – Rajasthan - Udaipur district – Sarda and Jhadol

blocks– Jharkhand – Dumka district – Jama block– 5000 Households – women’s groups – Tribal

• Mozambique– Inhambane province –Inhassaro district – 20

villages– 350 Households – 2500 beneficiaries - 25%

FHH, 20% PLWHA

Project locations and target groups

Page 18: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

How effective are IPs and GPH as mechanisms to enhance

performance of goat value chains?What determines IP, GPH performance?Do they result in equitable and sustainable benefits for the value chain actors?In what contexts and under what conditions can such models be replicated?

What are our research questions??

Page 19: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

A hybrid approach to M&E

Integration of the Outcome Mapping (OM) approach with the logframe

OM is people and outcome-oriented and focuses on behavioral change within those partners that a project or programs aims to influence directly

OM can be used to develop a map of what progress towards success would look like in terms of changes in behaviour of, for example, goat producers and other actors in the value chain including traders and actors providing support services and enabling environment, which are not easily handled through the logframe

Page 20: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

This workshop..

“Creating a people and outcome focused M&E system for imGoats”

Page 21: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

Identify the priority areas for the application of OM

Create a framework for an M&E system that focuses on these priorities

Link to or embed this in the broader project goal (increasing incomes and food security) and logframe objectives related to the piloting and dissemination of organizational and technical models

Outline project communication and exit strategies, workplans and other critical elements

Objectives of the workshop

Page 22: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique

ILRI is creating and integrating knowledge to enable diverse partners to find innovative solutions to

make livestock a sustainable

pathway out of poverty