This book argues that Africa can feed itself in a generation and help contribute to global food security despite its history of persistent food shortages and the rising threat of climate change. To achieve this, the continent must harness scientific and technological advances, invest in infrastructure, foster higher technical training, and create regional markets. It must also foster a new crop of entrepreneurial leaders dedicated to the continent's economic improvement.
This new edition provides ideas on how to place agriculture at the center of the continent's long-term economic transformation. It demonstrates how policy coordination can help realize agriculture's full potential as a motherboard for other economic activities. Incorporating lessons from academia, government, civil society, and private industry,The New Harvestoutlines how African countries can work together at regional levels to generate new knowledge and resources, harness technological advancement, encourage entrepreneurship, increase agricultural output, create markets, and improve overall economic performance.
Acknowledgments Introduction Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms Chapter 1: The Growing Economy Chapter 2: Advances in Science, Technology, and Engineering Chapter 3: Leapfrogging in Biotechnology Chapter 4: Agricultural Innovation Systems Chapter 5: Enabling Infrastructure Chapter 6: Human Capacity Chapter 7: Entrepreneurship Chapter 8: Governing Innovation Chapter 9: Conclusions and the Way Ahead Notes Index
This is a refreshing new book that steps back from the usual debates about appropriate agricultural policies and programme interventions for redressing Africa's pressing poverty and food security needs, to take a longer-term view of the kinds of science-based interventions that are needed to launch Africa's agricultural sector on a structurally different trajectory...Calestous Juma develops a compelling vision of hlƒ%