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Objectives of this presentation. To tell the story of maize creolization as a useful concept for assessing the impact of improved maize varieties in the livelihoods of poor Mexican farmersTo derive insight into the research process on impact assessment from this experience. Background: maize in Mex
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1. Maize Creolization: Strategic Opportunism in Research on the Impacts of Plant Breeding Mauricio Bellon
Bioversity International
2. Objectives of this presentation To tell the story of maize creolization as a useful concept for assessing the impact of improved maize varieties in the livelihoods of poor Mexican farmers
To derive insight into the research process on impact assessment from this experience
3. Background: maize in Mexico Maize is the most important crop cultivated in Mexico
Center of domestication and diversity
Plays a central role in the diets of both urban and rural Mexicans, particularly the poor
Occupies the largest area planted to any crop in the country and a large number of farmers are engaged in its production
In spite of half a century of maize plant breeding and presence of major seed companies only about 20% of area planted to improved varieties
Negligible adoption among the poor
Concern over the future of maize agriculture among the poor with introduction of NAFTA and increasingly market-inspired government policies
4. A simple model of diversity in crop variety choice Why do farmers maintain different varieties of a crop?
The crop plays multiple roles in their lives and livelihoods, reflected in the demand for multiple attributes
The link between the crop and farmers’ well-being is derived from the extent that the crop provides these attributes
Unlikely that one variety will provide all needed attributes at the individual or group level, hence multiple varieties are required
Choosing what variety to plant involves trade-offs
continually selecting seed of these varieties for replanting and, in some cases, promoting their hybridization with landraces, either by design or by accident, produce what many of them recognize as “creolized
Creolization lessens these trade-offs by adapting improved varieties to farmers’ conditions, thereby giving them new options
continually selecting seed of these varieties for replanting and, in some cases, promoting their hybridization with landraces, either by design or by accident, produce what many of them recognize as “creolized
Creolization lessens these trade-offs by adapting improved varieties to farmers’ conditions, thereby giving them new options
5. Maize Creolization Creolization: the process by which farmers expose and adapt maize improved varieties to their conditions and management
Poor farmers benefit from improved maize germplasm through creolization
Creolization ignored in conventional impact assessment studies of maize plant breeding
Creolization lessens trade-offs of improved varieties by adapting them to farmers’ conditions, thereby giving them new options, particularly to the poor
Studying maize creolization is complex, requires a very good understanding of farmers’ concepts and practices
key hypothesis is that poor farmers benefit from improved germplasm through creolization. While improved varieties possess desirable traits not found in landraces, they may lack useful traits landraces do have (e.g., a distinguishing feature of landraces is their local adaptation); hence farmers choosing between them face trade-offs in the traits they seek. Creolization lessens these trade-offs by adapting improved varieties to farmers’ conditions, thereby giving them new options key hypothesis is that poor farmers benefit from improved germplasm through creolization. While improved varieties possess desirable traits not found in landraces, they may lack useful traits landraces do have (e.g., a distinguishing feature of landraces is their local adaptation); hence farmers choosing between them face trade-offs in the traits they seek. Creolization lessens these trade-offs by adapting improved varieties to farmers’ conditions, thereby giving them new options
6. Creolization and poverty alleviation 1997 re-study of a village in Chiapas, Mexico originally studied in 1988
Multiple maize varieties planted
Different varieties considered for the “rich” and others for the “poor’
Farmers identified clearly the process of creolization and creolized varieties
Data on wealth ranking, farmers’ practices and knowledge
Conference “Assessing the Impact of Agricultural Research on Poverty Alleviation” San Jose, Costa Rica, September 14-16, 1999
7. Key conclusions of the work Creolized varieties provide farmers with similar advantages to improved varieties (e.g. higher yield, less lodging, shorter duration) but with less disadvantages (less management intensity)
This is consistent with the view that creolization allows more constrained--poorer--farmers to benefit from useful traits of improved germplasm
These results are only for one community and cannot be generalized
However, if the patterns observed are widespread, these findings have important implications for:
assessing the impact of CIMMYT in Mexico and Central America
reaching the poor
the impact of IPR (e.g. UPOV) on poor farmers
8. SPIA-initiated studies on impact on poverty alleviation SPIA call for studies on the impact of CGIAR on poverty alleviation
Propose to study maize creolization in tropical lowlands of Mexico (Chiapas and Oaxaca)
Initially reluctance, but finally accepted
Use of Sustainable Livelihoods Framework
Done in conjunction with several other studies
Use of quantitative and qualitative methods
Participant observation by anthropologists, focus group discussions, socioeconomic survey, agronomic evaluations
Adato, M. and R. Meinzen-Dick, eds. Agricultural Research, Livelihoods and Poverty: Studies of Economic and Social Impacts in Six Countries. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
9. Key conclusions of the work Farmers planted different types of maize varieties
No overall superior maize type; all types have advantages and disadvantages.
In the subsistence-oriented farming systems, landraces seem to have more advantages
In the commercially-oriented systems hybrids seem to have more advantages
In both systems, creolized varieties are commonly planted by different socioeconomic groups, particularly the poor
Creolized varieties occupy a niche that shifts according to the availability of improved germplasm and the orientation of farmers’ maize production
10. FAO-sponsored research “Study to develop quantitative measures of the costs of accessing crop genetic diversity and the services they provide”
Re-study of the Chiapas sites in 2005
Comparable methods to SPIA-study 2001
Dramatic changes in 3 years
Wide adoption of commercial maize hybrids, loss of landraces, but increased use of creolized varieties
Commercial seed companies playing a key role
Government subsidized hybrid seed and enable commercial seed companies to operate, also support for marketing maize in national markets
Agreement among actors (seed companies, farmers, gov’t officials) that without government subsidies to hybrid seed, adoption would not have happened to the extent that did
11. Lessons A theory or conceptual model that anchors the work
Use of multiple methods and triangulation
Openness to listening to others
Identify key messages from actors in the process i.e. farmers and transform them into testable hypotheses
Re-study same sites over time with comparable methods
Go from circumscribed case studies to more widely representative ones
Strategic opportunism: ability to adapt and/or modify our model, methods and results to address new opportunities:
issues identified or “imposed” by others or by new circumstances or insights