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ILRI ‘seminal seminars’ Presentation by task force ( Ewen Le Borgne , Iain Wright, Silvia Silvestri , Susan MacMillan, Vish Nene) Connecting the dots, seeing the bigger picture, achieving more impact. Overview. Why these seminars? What we propose? Who ’ s involved?
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ILRI ‘seminal seminars’ Presentation by task force (Ewen Le Borgne, Iain Wright, Silvia Silvestri, Susan MacMillan, Vish Nene) Connecting the dots, seeing the bigger picture, achieving more impact
Overview • Why these seminars? • What we propose? • Who’s involved? • When and where? • What next? • What else?
Why these seminars? • ILRI now holds lots of seminars with little: • Promotion • Relevance for all of us • Attendance / participation • Documentation • Impact • We want to improve this!
Why these seminars? • Our ‘seminal seminars’ should: • Map existing ILRI work ‘out loud’ • Make better use of in-house expertise • Tap into visitors’ experiences • Engage with thought leaders on inspiring issues • Unlock the power of interdisciplinary research • Raise and change our game as an open, vibrant, cutting edge livestock research institute • Achieve more impact via joined up thinking, actions and connections, inside and outside
What we propose? (1) • A regular series of seminars to ‘increase awareness of ILRI staff and partners of research topics of importance to ILRI, including the wider research context, and to provide a space and platform for conversations’.
What we propose? (2) • One-hour seminars: 20-minute presentations (max) or 30/40-minute chat shows, followed by conversation or questions and answers. • Possibly with assigned ‘questioners’ (people commenting the presentation). • Facilitated in Nairobi/Addis • Involving all ILRI offices (via WebEx) • Promoted properly and consistently • Enhanced through a ‘dry run’ (except visitor seminars) • Documented live and later through a short ‘info brief / communiqué’on the ILRI news site
What we propose? (3) • Topics used: • Livestock-associated diseases • Research in vs. for development • The mobile phone-enabled farming future? • Livestock and the climate change community • Pastoral research back on the agenda? • And many other relevant topics, including the series of big ideas (running in parallel)
Who’s involved? (1) • To organize the series? • Our task force (Angela, Ewen, Silvia, Susan, Tadelle, Tezira, Vish) • To give the seminars? • Any ILRI staff (anywhere) • Any visitor that has something interesting to share
Who’s involved? (2) • To attend? • ILRI staff across all locations (see how next slide) • Partners that can join our ILRI offices • Anyone…
When and where? • When? • (+/- Every last Wednesday of the month, 3-4pm (EAT) • And opportunistically with visitors • Where? • In rotation between Nairobi, Addis and other offices • On WebEx for virtual participants
Schedule 2013 • Monday 21 January: People, the planet and sustainable livestock • Thursday 7 February: The water footprint of livestock • Wednesday 27 March: Research for development in the livestock sector: Experiences of the IPMS project • Wednesday 24 April: How to make agriculture more attractive to young people in Africa: The case of Well Told Story comic books • Friday 31 May: Innovation platforms and systems • Wednesday 26 June: Dairy hubs in East Africa: Lessons from the East Africa Dairy Development Project
What else? • The other seminars: Theme/team seminars (including from visiting scholars), PhD & PostDoc seminars • What we suggest: • - We can offer guidance & support: share our checklist to organize events, coach on public speaking, support scheduling, design (facilitation), documentation, promotion • - But we cannot organize or streamline these other seminars. For now, we want to have a good routine in place
What else? • Possible connection with CG-wide Addis campus seminars • Connection with Town Halls • We need strong and reliable ICT facilities • And some budget to invite speakers (USD 5.000) • What do you think?
International Livestock Research Institute Better lives through livestock Animal agriculture to reduce poverty, hunger and environmental degradation in developing countries ILRI www.ilri.org