Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia

Soil degradation is a complex process driven by many unfavourable technical, socioeconomic, and institutional factors. Inversing the soil degradation dynamics requires an integrated approach where a set of soil-friendly, social and organisational actions within the agroecological approach are needed for system transformation. Within the GIZ ProSol project in Tunisia, ICARDA's SWC@Scale project is now piloting integrated interventions in a degraded area of Siliana governorate, Northwest Tunisia, to further enhance the sustainable adoption of a set of agroecological soil and water conservation practices in mixed crop-livestock systems. ICARDA and its National Research and Development partners are implementing a full agroecological sociotechnical package with farm and landscape interventions with forage-based crop rotations, improved grazing practices, mechanical and green consolidation of degraded land, cultivation of Sulla and Cactus opuntia in marginal lands, small-scale mechanisation, capacity development, awareness raising on soil regeneration and support of community organisations. The interventions in the selected community aim to generate system transformation dynamics and re-locate the local marginal systems on a sustainable intensification pathway. The SWC@Scale project further aims to learn from this open living lab experience and track social changes and adoption behaviour of farmers in response to the agroecological socio-technical package's implementation of the “integrated system transformation” actions. Lessons learned are shared with the PROSOL programme leadership in Tunisia for scaling. For that, the project has developed an adapted version of the scaling scan tool which explores the scope for large dissemination of agroecological practices implemented in the study area. The tool led to identify the opportunities and constraints related to the scaling of the technological packages. Notably, the crucial ingredients revealed by the tool are the level of knowledge of farmers and extension agents, the actors' collaborations (platforms), the governmental support (subsidies), and involvement and ownership by the public and private sector. The use of the scaling scan tools allowed us to elaborate a scaling roadmap showing the major activities needed to go at scale with the socio-technical packages, that can be shared with the national partners including the policy makers.

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Main Authors: Rudiger, Udo, Frija, Aymen, Alary, Véronique, Idoudi, Zied, Jebali, Oussam, Rekik, Mourad, Cheikh, Hatem, Zaim, Anis
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Published: DITSL
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/2/ID603988.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-6039882023-02-27T15:44:18Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/ Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia. Rudiger Udo, Frija Aymen, Alary Véronique, Idoudi Zied, Jebali Oussam, Rekik Mourad, Cheikh Hatem, Zaim Anis. 2022. In : Tropentag 2022: Can agroecological farming feed the world? Farmers' and academia's views. Book of abstracts. Tielkes Eric (ed.). ATSAF, CZU. Witzenhausen : DITSL, Résumé, p. 517. ISBN 978-3-7369-7671-9 Tropentag 2022, Prague, République tchèque, 14 Septembre 2022/16 Septembre 2022.https://www.tropentag.de <https://www.tropentag.de> Researchers Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia Rudiger, Udo Frija, Aymen Alary, Véronique Idoudi, Zied Jebali, Oussam Rekik, Mourad Cheikh, Hatem Zaim, Anis eng 2022 DITSL Tropentag 2022: Can agroecological farming feed the world? Farmers' and academia's views. Book of abstracts Soil degradation is a complex process driven by many unfavourable technical, socioeconomic, and institutional factors. Inversing the soil degradation dynamics requires an integrated approach where a set of soil-friendly, social and organisational actions within the agroecological approach are needed for system transformation. Within the GIZ ProSol project in Tunisia, ICARDA's SWC@Scale project is now piloting integrated interventions in a degraded area of Siliana governorate, Northwest Tunisia, to further enhance the sustainable adoption of a set of agroecological soil and water conservation practices in mixed crop-livestock systems. ICARDA and its National Research and Development partners are implementing a full agroecological sociotechnical package with farm and landscape interventions with forage-based crop rotations, improved grazing practices, mechanical and green consolidation of degraded land, cultivation of Sulla and Cactus opuntia in marginal lands, small-scale mechanisation, capacity development, awareness raising on soil regeneration and support of community organisations. The interventions in the selected community aim to generate system transformation dynamics and re-locate the local marginal systems on a sustainable intensification pathway. The SWC@Scale project further aims to learn from this open living lab experience and track social changes and adoption behaviour of farmers in response to the agroecological socio-technical package's implementation of the “integrated system transformation” actions. Lessons learned are shared with the PROSOL programme leadership in Tunisia for scaling. For that, the project has developed an adapted version of the scaling scan tool which explores the scope for large dissemination of agroecological practices implemented in the study area. The tool led to identify the opportunities and constraints related to the scaling of the technological packages. Notably, the crucial ingredients revealed by the tool are the level of knowledge of farmers and extension agents, the actors' collaborations (platforms), the governmental support (subsidies), and involvement and ownership by the public and private sector. The use of the scaling scan tools allowed us to elaborate a scaling roadmap showing the major activities needed to go at scale with the socio-technical packages, that can be shared with the national partners including the policy makers. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/2/ID603988.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html https://www.tropentag.de info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/https://www.tropentag.de info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/purl/https://www.tropentag.de/2022/abstracts/abstracts.php
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description Soil degradation is a complex process driven by many unfavourable technical, socioeconomic, and institutional factors. Inversing the soil degradation dynamics requires an integrated approach where a set of soil-friendly, social and organisational actions within the agroecological approach are needed for system transformation. Within the GIZ ProSol project in Tunisia, ICARDA's SWC@Scale project is now piloting integrated interventions in a degraded area of Siliana governorate, Northwest Tunisia, to further enhance the sustainable adoption of a set of agroecological soil and water conservation practices in mixed crop-livestock systems. ICARDA and its National Research and Development partners are implementing a full agroecological sociotechnical package with farm and landscape interventions with forage-based crop rotations, improved grazing practices, mechanical and green consolidation of degraded land, cultivation of Sulla and Cactus opuntia in marginal lands, small-scale mechanisation, capacity development, awareness raising on soil regeneration and support of community organisations. The interventions in the selected community aim to generate system transformation dynamics and re-locate the local marginal systems on a sustainable intensification pathway. The SWC@Scale project further aims to learn from this open living lab experience and track social changes and adoption behaviour of farmers in response to the agroecological socio-technical package's implementation of the “integrated system transformation” actions. Lessons learned are shared with the PROSOL programme leadership in Tunisia for scaling. For that, the project has developed an adapted version of the scaling scan tool which explores the scope for large dissemination of agroecological practices implemented in the study area. The tool led to identify the opportunities and constraints related to the scaling of the technological packages. Notably, the crucial ingredients revealed by the tool are the level of knowledge of farmers and extension agents, the actors' collaborations (platforms), the governmental support (subsidies), and involvement and ownership by the public and private sector. The use of the scaling scan tools allowed us to elaborate a scaling roadmap showing the major activities needed to go at scale with the socio-technical packages, that can be shared with the national partners including the policy makers.
format conference_item
author Rudiger, Udo
Frija, Aymen
Alary, Véronique
Idoudi, Zied
Jebali, Oussam
Rekik, Mourad
Cheikh, Hatem
Zaim, Anis
spellingShingle Rudiger, Udo
Frija, Aymen
Alary, Véronique
Idoudi, Zied
Jebali, Oussam
Rekik, Mourad
Cheikh, Hatem
Zaim, Anis
Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
author_facet Rudiger, Udo
Frija, Aymen
Alary, Véronique
Idoudi, Zied
Jebali, Oussam
Rekik, Mourad
Cheikh, Hatem
Zaim, Anis
author_sort Rudiger, Udo
title Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
title_short Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
title_full Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
title_fullStr Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed Scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in Tunisia
title_sort scaling agroecological packages for soil and water conservation in mixed crop livestock systems in tunisia
publisher DITSL
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/603988/2/ID603988.pdf
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