Abstract

The authors are members of an international study team that conducted research on one of the islands making up the Sundarbans region of West Bengal in India in September 2008. This was at the request of two nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), one European and one Indian, which have partnered with each other to bring long-term development to this desperately poor area. The purpose of the research was to analyze existing agricultural practices and to develop recommendations for the two partner NGOs on how to work with farmers toward more sustainable, low-input farming systems that would contribute to poverty alleviation and simultaneously address some of the serious challenges of climate change affecting the lives of millions living in this low-lying region. This paper brings together personal reflections by two members of the study team upon the research process and, more particularly, on the take-up of recommendations. The starting point for this paper is the observation that the recommendations were implemented by the two NGOs with more concern for meeting the needs of the NGOs, rather than the needs of the farmers the research was ultimately intended to serve. Follow-up visits after six and 18 months showed that an organic demonstration farm had been developed in preference to rolling out recommendations aimed at supporting change in farming practice on individual farms and on involving people with the most precarious livelihoods. The paper explores the bumpy nature of the relationship between the researchers, the two NGOs, and the intended ultimate beneficiaries.

Highlights

  • European nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that raises and allocates funds forThe Sundarbans region in Indian West Bengal is work with partners in the Global South, including low-lying and composed of many islands watered the Indian NGO that has representation in by inlets from rivers and the Bay of Bengal

  • Practices and to develop recommendations for the two partner NGOs on how to work with farmers toward more sustainable, low-input farming systems that would contribute to poverty alleviation and simultaneously address some of the serious challenges of climate change affecting the lives of millions living in this low-lying region

  • The capacity of the agrarian population and the production of two reports containing to establish resilient farming systems is of parafindings and recommendations, two more visits mount importance if the current high rates of landwere made at the invitation of the host NGOs, six loss due to coastal erosion and other changes months and 18 months later, in order to track the brought about by climate change are to be mitiimplementation of the study team’s gated

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Summary

Introduction

European NGO that raises and allocates funds forThe Sundarbans region in Indian West Bengal is work with partners in the Global South, including low-lying and composed of many islands watered the Indian NGO that has representation in by inlets from rivers and the Bay of Bengal The Sundarbans region in Indian West Bengal is work with partners in the Global South, including low-lying and composed of many islands watered the Indian NGO that has representation in by inlets from rivers and the Bay of Bengal The capacity of the agrarian population and the production of two reports containing to establish resilient farming systems is of parafindings and recommendations, two more visits mount importance if the current high rates of landwere made at the invitation of the host NGOs, six loss due to coastal erosion and other changes months and 18 months later, in order to track the brought about by climate change are to be mitiimplementation of the study team’s gated. In this paper we discuss how our recommeninnovative, low-cost farming systems wherever dations, agreed to by all partners, were selectively they are settled.

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