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About FANRPAN [email protected] www.fanrpan.org

About FANRPAN [email protected]

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Page 1: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

About FANRPAN

[email protected]

www.fanrpan.org

Page 2: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

What is FANRPAN?

Page 3: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN-SADC Ministers’ Call

FANRPAN

Page 4: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

• Created in 1997, and registered in 2002

• Focus:- Improving policy research, analysis and formulation on key priority

themes- Developing human and institutional capacity for coordinated policy

dialogue among all stakeholders- Improving policy decision making by enhancing the generation,

exchange and use of policy-related information

• Stakeholder categories: - Farmers, Government, Researchers, Private sector

• Members/National nodes in 13 African countries: Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

Introducing FANRPAN

Page 5: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN’s Strategic Plan (2007 – 15)

Vision

A food secure Africa free from hunger and poverty

Mission

To promote effective Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources (FANR) policies by

– facilitating linkages and partnerships between government and civil society,

– building the capacity for policy analysis and policy dialogue in southern Africa, and

– supporting demand-driven policy research and analysis

Page 6: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Structure: OrganogramMEMBERS/SHAREHOLDERS

Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Board of GovernorsRepresentatives of:

Government (South Africa and Zambia) ; Farmers (President – IFAP); Private Sector (Vacant); Regional Economic Communities ; SADC (FANR Director); COMESA (Secretary General); Research Institutions (University of Pretoria); Donor (USAID); CEO (ex-officio)

Regional Secretariat

CEO

Programmes Policy ResearchCommunication and Advocacy

Finance and Administration

Implementation - Countries and Lead Institutions

SwazilandCANGO

MalawiCISANET

ZambiaACF

AngolaMinistry of

Agriculture & Rural

Development

LesothoISAS

MadagascarMinistry of Agriculture, Livestock & Fisheries

NamibiaNEPRU

South AfricaNAMC

TanzaniaESRF

BotswanaBIDPA

MozambiqueEduardo

Mondlane University

ZimbabweARC

MauritiusUniversity

of Mauritius

Programmes

Natural Resources and Environment

WaterBiofuelsClimate Change

Social Protection and Livelihoods

Impact of HIV/AIDSHousehold Vulnerability

Food SystemsBiosafetyBiotechnologyFood PricesCAADP

Agricultural Inputs and OutputsWomen in PolicyInput Vouchers and SubsidySeed Security

Page 7: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

1. Angola – Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and Wambo University

2. Botswana – Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis (BIDPA)

3. Lesotho – National University of Lesotho, Institute of Southern African Studies (ISAS)

4. Madagascar - Rural Development Policy Unit, Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries (MAEP)

5. Malawi - Civil Society Agriculture Network (CISANET)

6. Mauritius – Department of Agricultural Production and Systems, School of Agriculture University of Mauritius

7. Mozambique – Faculdade de Agronmia e Engenharia Florestal, Eduardo Mondlane University

8. Namibia - Namibian Economic Policy Research Unit (NEPRU)

9. South Africa – National Agricultural Marketing Council (NAMC)

10. Swaziland – Department of Agricultural Economics and Management, University of Swaziland and Coordinating Assembly of NGOs (CANGO)

11. Tanzania - Economic and Social Research Foundation (ESRF)

12. Zambia - Agricultural Consultative Forum (ACF)

13. Zimbabwe – Agricultural Research Council

FANRPAN Structure: Node Hosting Institutions

Page 8: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Structure: Network of Networks

FANRPANRegional

Secretariat

Malawi

Namibia

Mozambique

Tanzania

Mauritius

South Africa

Swaziland

Lesotho

Angola

Botswana

Zimbabwe

Zambia

Government

Researchers

CSOs

Madagascar

Farmers

Private Sector

Commercial Farmers

Small-scale farmers associations

Commodity Associations

Page 9: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Structure: Membership Size

• Totals include other membership groups within associations

Country Government Farmers Research NGOs Donors Private for profit

Other Total

Angola 5 6 9 3 23Botswana 27 9 unions 3 1 5 6 18 74

Lesotho 6 ministries 1 5 7 6 2 27Madagascar 5 5 unions 3 2 2 2 1 20

Malawi 3 6 unions 5 60 8 12 94

Mauritius 6 ministries 5 federations

6 2 apex 5 12 12 Parastatals

48

Mozambique 4 2 unions 12 2 12 3 35

Namibia 2 2 unions 4 3 4 2 17

South Africa 1 4 6 23 34Swaziland 7 5 12Tanzania 13 4 unions 10 5 1 2 35

Zambia 12 4 1 7 6 16 45Zimbabwe 30 3 unions 25 20 4 50 132

Page 10: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Strategic Framework

Capacity Building Policy Research

Voice

1 2

3

Page 11: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Strategy Implementation Arrangements(Who does what?)

WHO DOES WHAT? WHERE

Board of Governors

Strategic direction of network and fiduciary responsibility Regional level

Technical Committee

Global team of eminent researchers and champions advising on programme development

Global/Regional/National level

Regional Secretariat

Planning, Implementation and financial and technical reporting

Global/Regional/National level

Programme Coordinator

Cluster of projects coordinated under each of flagship programmes (Food Systems, Agricultural Systems, Natural Resources and Environment, HIV and AIDS, Institutional Strengthening) Regional level

National Nodes

Policy analysis and dialogue: Knowledge Brokers (innovators, researchers, farmers, private sector, media) National level

Page 12: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

What Research do we do?

Page 13: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN’s Thematic Thrusts

Social Protection & Livelihoods

Food Systems

Agricultural Productivity – Markets

Natural Resources and Environment

Page 14: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Programmes & ProjectsInstitutional Strengthening

• Strengthen country node secretariats and steering committees• Establish and maintain database of node members and FANR experts• Establish Policy dialogue calendar• Bench mark the capacity of node hosting institution and regional secretariat and implement capacity strengthening

Food Systems

• Strategies to cope with the impact of global environmental change on food systems, (production, processing and packaging, distribution, retail and consumption)• Effects of restructuring food markets on food security in the SADC region focusing on selected food sub systems e.g. (vegetables, cereal particularly maize grain, beef and dairy products)• Agricultural policy priorities for improving rural livelihoods in Southern Africa

Agricultural Productivity - Markets

• Improved access to inputs (fertiliser and seed) by smallholder farmers• Making markets work for the poor

Page 15: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Programme and ProjectsSocial Protection & Livelihoods

• Undertake longitudinal surveys to update databases on the impact of HIV and AIDS on agriculture • Review national AIDS policies and advise on social protection policies for vulnerable groups• Institutionalise the use of the Human Vulnerability Index (HVI) developed by FANRPAN, for improved targeting of vulnerable groups.

Natural Resources and Environment

• Policies for stimulating bio-energy utilisation in southern Africa• Policies for promoting and supporting small scale irrigation• Policies for improved water access by the poor • Mainstreaming agro-forestry into broader agricultural development policies

Page 16: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

How do we inform policy processes?

Page 17: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Policy Processes1. Partnerships

2. Multi-stakeholder Policy Dialogues WorkshopsTheatre for Policy Advocacy

3. International Advocacy Engagements

4. Electronic/Digital Media Website , TV, RadioCompact Discs

5. Print MediaPolicy Brief SeriesNewslettersPolicy Advisory NotesProject Brochures

Page 18: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Partnerships by Stakeholder Grouping - 47

1. Regional Economic Communities (REC )

2. Government

3. Sub-Regional Organisations

4. Farmer Organisation

5. Private Sector

6. University

7. Civil Society Organisations (CSO)

8. International Organisation and CGIARs

Page 19: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Deepen regional integration

Reduction in poverty

Improve on information technology, communication and policy advocacy

Harmonization of policies and creation of legal and regulatory framework

Human and social development through capacity building

Regional Policy Priorities

SADC and COMESA(14

Countries)(19

Countries)

8 countries are members of both RECs

Page 20: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Support to RECsChallenges in Implementing Regional Agenda

Poor capacity for Policy Analysis

Poor capacity for Policy Advocacy and use of evidence

Lack of platforms for multi-stakeholder engagement

Page 21: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Multi – Stakeholder Dialogues

Across 13 Countries(All Members from Stakeholder Groups)

Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia,

South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Ongoing Research Studies

Emerging Issues andFANR Policies Tracking

National Policy

Dialogues(Periodic)

NATIONAL LEVEL

Policy Advisory

Notes

Issues forRegional Dialogue

REGIONAL LEVEL

• Coordination of multi-country studies• Synthesis of issues from Nodes

Into Agenda for Annual Regional Dialogue

• Network Administration and Development (Networking, Fund Raising, Membership drive)

Southern Africa Region(Representatives from all FANR

Stakeholder Groups)• Farmers’ Organisations• Governments• Private Sector• Researchers• Development Partners

Page 22: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Outputs

Dialogue Proceedings and Resolutions Policy Recommendations Stakeholder development commitments Case Studies of success stories to facilitate best practice

transfer Agenda setting and coordinated next steps/way

forward

Multi – Stakeholder Dialogues

Page 23: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Annual Regional Dialogues

2001: Agricultural policy making in Southern Africa: Issues and challenges

2002: Strengthening institutional capacity for policy research and analysis among

stakeholders in the SADC region

2003: Regional Stakeholder Meeting on Agricultural Recovery, Food Security and Trade Policies in Southern Africa

2004: Policy strategies needed to promote permanent agricultural recovery and productivity growth in the SADC region

2005: Creating a conducive policy environment for a food secure Southern Africa

YEAR THEME

2006: Creating a conducive policy environment for inputs intensification and market development for increased production and productivity

2007: Meeting the demand for effective Food Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis in Southern Africa

“Triggers” for Agricultural Growth in Southern Africa 2008: Regional Strategies for Addressing the Global Food Crisis

2009: True Contribution of Agriculture to Economic Growth and Poverty

Reduction in Southern Africa Maputo, Mozambique

Page 24: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Awards

Multi – Stakeholder Dialogues

2008 2009

H. E. Dr. Bingu wa MutharikaPresident – Republic of Malawi

H.E. L. DIEGO, Prime Minister – MozambiqueOn behalf of President Emilio Guebuza

Page 25: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

Information Dissemination to Strengthen Policy Advocacy

Policy Dialogue platforms at national and regional level to support SADC RISDP and CAADP Processes

Media Training on documenting the role of subsidies in the region.

AWARD Training - trained 60 women scientists in Policy Development Processes

FANRPAN Activities (2008 – 09)

Page 26: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Products/Clients

Government/Policy Makers

Farmers Organisations

Private Sector

Researchers/Policy AnalystsTechnical Partners

Development Partners

Media and Advocacy

Policy Advice/Options/Evidenceto support policy development

Enabling policies – Production toTrade and Markets (Value Chain)

Enabling policies – Production toTrade and Markets (Value Chain)

Platform for research, analysis and dissemination

Grant worthiness – track recordand impact

Rallying point for regional FANR news

FA

NR

PA

NM

ulti-S

take

ho

lde

r Dialo

gu

es

FANRPAN Communications and Advocacy

Page 27: About FANRPAN policy@fanrpan.org

FANRPAN Regional Policy Dialogue Maputo, September 2009

THANK YOU

Hon S. Ngwenya, SG – COMESA, FANRPAN

Board ChairH.E. L. DIEGOPrime MinisterMozambique

Hon. C. Pajune Vice Minister - Agriculture

Mozambique

Hon S. Holland, Minister - National Healing

Zimbabwe

Prof. H. AmaniFANRPAN Board

Chairman(2004 – 2007)

Madame C. KhupeUSAID

Dr. S. Mundia, Member -

FANRPAN Board

Dr. L. M. Sibanda, CEO FANRPAN

Prof, Mucavele Former CEO

NEPAD

Madame C. CossaWinner – FANRPAN Civil Society Award

Winner

Pro. Filipe J. CuotoVice-Chancellor

UEM