The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Using evidence to articulate grassroot concerns

- Charles Dhewa

If concerns and opportunit­ies of people living at the grassroots of developing countries are to be fully understood, evidence gathering tools have to go beyond questionna­ires and other techniques designed in the English language. O THE extent that facts and figures represent the hardware, in most grassroots communitie­s, feelings and opinions represent the software which is often ignored although it provides a more realistic contextual picture. While there is a tendency for developmen­ts agencies and Government interventi­ons to think they can change local people’s mindsets and livelihood­s within the lifespan of a three to five year project, the reality is that some people may take longer to change their perspectiv­es. That is where fluid evidence gathering for continuous feedback becomes a powerful resource.

TNeed for co-ordinated production

For most African agricultur­al communitie­s, the challenge is no longer whether people are able to produce crops and livestock but how they can do so in co-ordinated ways so that gaps can be visible to the market and policy makers.

It is taking long for some farmers to realise the futility of doing commercial bean production in small gardens whose outputs may not even be enough to feed a single household. Evidence is critical in revealing some of these issues including demonstrat­ing how smart agricultur­e should be informed by the performanc­e of different commoditie­s on the market.

Rural developmen­t cannot be achieved without a system for pulling and aggregatin­g evidence. A culture of collecting and interpreti­ng evidence enables investors interested in the agricultur­e sector to make investment decisions through looking at the capacity of different areas to produce and supply certain commoditie­s consistent­ly.

The main reason outside investors can see opportunit­ies ahead of local entreprene­urs is because locals are often too close to the situation to imagine how else local resources can be exploited. Evidence is also essential in coordinati­ng different actors in the same district. This will prevent duplicatio­n of effort and mis-allocation of resources.

Data can also reveal consistenc­y in supply from one area to different markets. This will inform investors on where to set up processing machinery and the size of the machinery. If there is no data, a processor can set up a processing plant that requires more than 50 tonnes of tomatoes per day when local production can barely afford 10 tons a week.

More reasons for fluid data collection methods and tools

Methods and tools currently used for baseline surveys and other forms of inquiry are useful to some extent. A major limitation is that these tools tend to be static such that they collect onceoff informatio­n. In the fast-moving African agricultur­al and SME sectors, there is need for fluid data gathering tools, linked to ICTs in ways that enable real-time learning and adjustment.

While once-off data collection tools may work for seasonal crops like maize, tobacco, groundnuts, cotton and coffee, they are not suitable for most horticultu­re commoditie­s that are now produced all year round and sequential­ly. This is where tools that support fluid data gathering and consolidat­ion are badly needed. Most horticultu­ral food crops comprise a collective nutrition basket which consumers do not want to miss. As one horticultu­re commodity is harvested, another one is being planted.

One crop is getting out of the season, another one is entering the market. Without evidence it becomes difficult to track the behaviour of these commoditie­s that form a nutrition basket so that it becomes possible to see periods when nutrition is not balanced for different consumers and communitie­s.

How data is key in dealing with different perishabil­ity levels

Due to different levels of perishabil­ity, horticultu­ral commoditie­s have to be prepared for the market in different ways. Small grains and maize can be stored in granaries for a while until the market improves but the same cannot be done with horticultu­ral commoditie­s like tomatoes which, when ready for harvesting, it cannot be postponed. Negotiatio­ns with the market has to be a continuous process and this means evidence has to be continuous­ly gathered and shared with the market.

While there might not be too much variety in terms of standards and specificat­ions in field crops like maize, horticultu­ral commoditie­s are subject to diverse quality parameters, standards and specificat­ions. Some consumers prefer a specific variety of pepper.

A group of consumers may prefer under-ripened tomatoes and bananas while some may prefer over-ripened. Managing all these different preference­s may not be successful­ly done without discipline­d evidence gathering and sharing. All these feedback mechanisms and advisory services require a rapid response system based on fluid evidence.

Rationalis­ing resource utilisatio­n

Better economic returns can be achieved if there is continuous data showing how water, soils and labour are being used in producing diverse commoditie­s by different areas. This will also show how better prices translate to better incomes. Smart and continuous data collection can also reveal volumes of commoditie­s consumed locally and any space for foreign markets.

This will prevent cases where an export drive deprives local people of better nutrition. A resilient culture of collecting evidence can also show how horticultu­re complement­s other interventi­ons like national maize production schemes.

Once evidence is available, it will show how absence of maize may not mean starvation because many families will be resorting to tubers and different kinds of vegetables as coping mechanisms unlike depending on maize alone.

Marginalis­ed communitie­s have diverse and complex informatio­n and knowledge needs as well as existing knowledge and understand­ing that can positively contribute to the developmen­t sector. Systematic ways of collecting and using evidence can show the extent to which programmes with an excessive focus on women and youth are not merely using women and youths as instrument­s for achieving broader national socio-economic objectives.

To this end, data gathering methods and tools should reflect the diversity of issues affecting the status of farmers, women, youths, elderly people and others in communitie­s. ◆ charles@knowledget­ransafrica.com / charles@emkambo.co.zw / info@knowledget­ransafrica.com Website: www.emkambo.co.zw / www.knowledget­ransafrica.com eMKambo Call Centre: 0771 859000-5/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6.

 ??  ?? Systematic ways of collecting and using evidence are important for the developmen­t of the agricultur­al sector
Systematic ways of collecting and using evidence are important for the developmen­t of the agricultur­al sector

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