Abstract

Learning together in mediated voluntary networks can mobilise skills and innovations that help to facilitate learning and uptake of rainwater harvesting and conservation practices. It boosts extension capacity while at the same time growing farmer capabilities, tapping on the distributed cognition. These practices help to heal wicked problems of drought and global change challenges affecting marginalised farmers in South Africa. South Africa has water, nutrition and food security challenges, especially the Eastern Cape Province where there is a relatively high level of poverty. These challenges place heavy pressure on the agricultural sector as it is the main user of the allocated water in the country. In this paper, the learning of and agency for rainwater harvesting and conservation practices are explored as responses to these challenges. Despite existing cultural histories of such practices among the amaXhosa people, information on these practices is not readily available to small-scale rural farmers who thus struggle for the want of knowing. This research forms part of a Water Research Commission project, Amanzi for Food, whose intention is to mediate collaborative and co-engaged learning among networked farmers, extension workers, researchers and agricultural educators through course-mediated use of Water Research Commission rainwater harvesting and conservation materials. Key words: Agricultural extension, education, Rainwater harvesting, Collaborative learning, Networks

Highlights

  • This paper is based on formative interventionist and generative research carried out primarily in the Amathole District of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa over a period of seventeen months from May 2014 to October 2015

  • The research findings are presented by highlighting the key constraints and tensions and demonstrating how facilitation took place in a learning network and how it led to collaborative establishment of rainwater harvesting demonstration sites

  • There were tensions found in how extension supported farmers with inputs in support of crop production, whereby inputs were determined from higher offices rather than from the grassroots, and did not always meet grassroots demands as expressed by an Extension officer

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Summary

Introduction

This paper is based on formative interventionist and generative research carried out primarily in the Amathole District of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa over a period of seventeen months from May 2014 to October 2015. This ‘Imvotho Bubomi’ learning network was established through a project of the Water Research Commission (WRC) of South Africa called ‘Amanzi for Food’. University’s Environmental Learning Research Centre as part of an action oriented strategy to disseminate rainwater harvesting materials developed by the WRC.

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