IPM transfer and adoption

Participatory IPM research, through its involvement of farmers, marketing agents, and public agencies, is designed to facilitate diffusion of IPM strategies. However, widespread IPM adoption requires careful attention to a host of factors that can spell the difference between a few hundred farmers adopting IPM locally and millions adopting it over a large area. A number of strategies have been implemented over time in efforts to speed diffusion of IPM around the world. These strategies include working with traditional public extension agencies and approaches and relying on private for-profit and not-for-profit entities that use a variety of specialized training and technology-transfer methods. The complexities of IPM programs; vast differences in local public-extension capabilities; resources, education, and socio-economic differences among farmers; and the need to cost-effectively match IPM strategies to IPM solutions dictates a multi-faceted approach to IPM diffusion if adoption is to be maximized. Given that public resources are scarce, a central issue is how to engage farmers in IPM in a way that maximizes the amount of learning for the resources expended. The purpose of this chapter is to identify some of the lessons learned about how to maximize the depth and breadth o f farmer engagement in IPM.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Norton, George W., Moore, Keith, Quishpe, David, Barrera, Víctor Hugo, Debass, Thomas, Moyo, Sibusiso
Format: Libro biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Ames, Iowa: Blackwell, 2005 2005
Subjects:GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA, MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS, PLAGAS DE PLANTAS, PLAGAS, MIP, TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA, ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES,
Online Access:http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/jspui/handle/41000/128
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spelling dig-iniap-41000-1282018-03-23T20:51:23Z IPM transfer and adoption Globalizing integrated pest managemen Norton, George W. Moore, Keith Quishpe, David Barrera, Víctor Hugo Debass, Thomas Moyo, Sibusiso GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS PLAGAS DE PLANTAS PLAGAS MIP TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES Participatory IPM research, through its involvement of farmers, marketing agents, and public agencies, is designed to facilitate diffusion of IPM strategies. However, widespread IPM adoption requires careful attention to a host of factors that can spell the difference between a few hundred farmers adopting IPM locally and millions adopting it over a large area. A number of strategies have been implemented over time in efforts to speed diffusion of IPM around the world. These strategies include working with traditional public extension agencies and approaches and relying on private for-profit and not-for-profit entities that use a variety of specialized training and technology-transfer methods. The complexities of IPM programs; vast differences in local public-extension capabilities; resources, education, and socio-economic differences among farmers; and the need to cost-effectively match IPM strategies to IPM solutions dictates a multi-faceted approach to IPM diffusion if adoption is to be maximized. Given that public resources are scarce, a central issue is how to engage farmers in IPM in a way that maximizes the amount of learning for the resources expended. The purpose of this chapter is to identify some of the lessons learned about how to maximize the depth and breadth o f farmer engagement in IPM. 2015-05-09T12:45:25Z 2015-05-09T12:45:25Z 2005 Libro Artículo 10:0-8138-0490-6 *EC-INIAP-BEESC-MGC. Quito (7324 p. 143) http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/jspui/handle/41000/128 en p. 143-157 application/pdf E. E. Santa Catalina Ames, Iowa: Blackwell, 2005
institution INIAP
collection DSpace
country Ecuador
countrycode EC
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-iniap
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca INIAP
language English
topic GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA
MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS
PLAGAS DE PLANTAS
PLAGAS
MIP
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA
ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES
GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA
MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS
PLAGAS DE PLANTAS
PLAGAS
MIP
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA
ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES
spellingShingle GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA
MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS
PLAGAS DE PLANTAS
PLAGAS
MIP
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA
ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES
GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA
MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS
PLAGAS DE PLANTAS
PLAGAS
MIP
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA
ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES
Norton, George W.
Moore, Keith
Quishpe, David
Barrera, Víctor Hugo
Debass, Thomas
Moyo, Sibusiso
IPM transfer and adoption
description Participatory IPM research, through its involvement of farmers, marketing agents, and public agencies, is designed to facilitate diffusion of IPM strategies. However, widespread IPM adoption requires careful attention to a host of factors that can spell the difference between a few hundred farmers adopting IPM locally and millions adopting it over a large area. A number of strategies have been implemented over time in efforts to speed diffusion of IPM around the world. These strategies include working with traditional public extension agencies and approaches and relying on private for-profit and not-for-profit entities that use a variety of specialized training and technology-transfer methods. The complexities of IPM programs; vast differences in local public-extension capabilities; resources, education, and socio-economic differences among farmers; and the need to cost-effectively match IPM strategies to IPM solutions dictates a multi-faceted approach to IPM diffusion if adoption is to be maximized. Given that public resources are scarce, a central issue is how to engage farmers in IPM in a way that maximizes the amount of learning for the resources expended. The purpose of this chapter is to identify some of the lessons learned about how to maximize the depth and breadth o f farmer engagement in IPM.
format Libro
topic_facet GESTIÓN DE LUCHA INTEGRADA
MANEJO INTEGRADO DE PLAGAS
PLAGAS DE PLANTAS
PLAGAS
MIP
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGÍA
ADOPCIÓN DE INNOVACIONES
author Norton, George W.
Moore, Keith
Quishpe, David
Barrera, Víctor Hugo
Debass, Thomas
Moyo, Sibusiso
author_facet Norton, George W.
Moore, Keith
Quishpe, David
Barrera, Víctor Hugo
Debass, Thomas
Moyo, Sibusiso
author_sort Norton, George W.
title IPM transfer and adoption
title_short IPM transfer and adoption
title_full IPM transfer and adoption
title_fullStr IPM transfer and adoption
title_full_unstemmed IPM transfer and adoption
title_sort ipm transfer and adoption
publisher Ames, Iowa: Blackwell, 2005
publishDate 2005
url http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/jspui/handle/41000/128
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AT moyosibusiso ipmtransferandadoption
AT nortongeorgew globalizingintegratedpestmanagemen
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