What Kind of Research and Development is Needed for Natural Resource Management?
Corresponding Author
Date
2009-01-22Date Issued
2006-09-01ISI journal
Impact factor: 2.663 (Year: 2009)
Citation
Bruce Campbell, Jürgen Hagmann, Jeff Sayer, Ann Stroud, Richard Thomas, Eval Wollenberg. (22/1/2009). What Kind of Research and Development is Needed for Natural Resource Management. Water International, 31 (3), pp. 343-360.
Abstract
This paper presents a set of principles and operational guidelines for research and
development (R&D) to better address natural resource management problems distilled in a series of workshops
with more than 150 experts and practitioners. The principles and guidelines, a number of which relate to
scaling issues, are illustrated with case studies from Zimbabwe and Indonesia. The former included research on
watershed management for improved small-scale irrigation, while the latter focused on work with communities
that had confronted logging companies, partly because of the negative impact of logging on water quality. The
principles are grouped as follows: (a) learning approaches; (b) systems approaches, and (c) organisational
models. Eleven operational guidelines for implementing the approach are suggested, arranged in three clusters:
(a) working together; (b) establishing the institutional and organisational framework; and (c) improving
the approaches to suit the task. The elements and strategies for two of these cornerstones (collaborative
partnerships and scaling-up and scaling-out) are illustrated to indicate the quality needed to achieve
appropriate implementation of the R&D approach.
DSpace URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11766/13499Other URI
https://mel.cgiar.org/dspace/limitedCollections
- Agricultural Research Knowledge [12450]
Author(s) ORCID(s)
Campbell, Brucehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0123-4859
Thomas, Richardhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8009-5681
Subject(s)
AGROVOC Keywords
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