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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 32
STRENGTHENING THE ROLE OF FARMERS
Objectives
32.5. The following objectives are
proposed:
·
To encourage a
decentralized decision-making process through the creation and
strengthening of local and village organizations that would delegate
power and responsibility to primary users of natural resources;
·
To support and
enhance the legal capacity of women and vulnerable groups with regard to
access, use and tenure of land;
·
To promote and
encourage sustainable farming practices and technologies;
·
To introduce or
strengthen policies that would encourage self-sufficiency in low-input
and low-energy technologies, including indigenous practices, and pricing
mechanisms that internalize environmental costs;
·
To develop a
policy framework that provides incentives and motivation among farmers
for sustainable and efficient farming practices;
·
To enhance the
participation of farmers, men and women, in the design and
implementation of policies directed towards these ends, through their
representative organizations.
Activities
(a) Management-related activities
32.6. National Governments should:
·
Ensure the
implementation of the programmes on sustainable livelihoods, agriculture
and rural development, managing fragile ecosystems, water use in
agriculture, and integrated management of natural resources;
·
Promote pricing
mechanisms, trade policies, fiscal incentives and other policy
instruments that positively affect individual farmer's decisions about
an efficient and sustainable use of natural resources, and take full
account of the impact of these decisions on household food security,
farm incomes, employment and the environment;
·
Involve farmers
and their representative organizations in the formulation of policy;
·
Protect,
recognize and formalize women's access to tenure and use of land, as
well as rights to land, access to credit, technology, inputs and
training;
·
Support the
formation of farmers' organizations by providing adequate legal and
social conditions.
32.7. Support for farmers' organizations
could be arranged as follows:
·
National and
international research centres should cooperate with farmers'
organizations in developing location-specific environment-friendly
farming techniques;
·
National
Governments, multilateral and bilateral development agencies and
non-governmental organizations should collaborate with farmers'
organizations in formulating agricultural development projects to
specific agro-ecological zones.
(b) Data and information
32.8. Governments and farmers'
organizations should:
·
Initiate
mechanisms to document, synthesize and disseminate local knowledge,
practices and project experiences so that they will make use of the
lessons of the past when formulating and implementing policies affecting
farming, forest and fishing populations;
·
Establish
networks for the exchange of experiences with regard to farming that
help to conserve land, water and forest resources, minimize the use of
chemicals and reduce or reutilize farm wastes;
·
Develop pilot
projects and extension services that would seek to build on the needs
and knowledge base of women farmers.
(c) International and regional cooperation
32.9. FAO, IFAD, WFP, the World Bank, the
regional development banks and other international organizations
involved in rural development should involve farmers and their
representatives in their deliberations, as appropriate.
32.10. Representative organizations of
farmers should establish programmes for the development and support of
farmers' organizations, particularly in developing countries.
Means of
implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
32.11. The financing needed for this
programme area is estimated in chapter 14 (Promoting sustainable
agriculture and rural development), particularly in the programme area
entitled "Ensuring people's participation and promoting human resource
development for sustainable agriculture". The costs shown under chapters
3 (Combating poverty), 12 (Managing fragile ecosystems: combating
desertification and drought), and 13 (Managing fragile ecosystems:
sustainable mountain development) are also relevant to this programme
area.
(b) Scientific and technological means
32.12. Governments and appropriate
international organizations, in collaboration with national research
organizations and non-governmental organizations should, as appropriate:
·
Develop
environmentally sound farming technologies that enhance crop yields,
maintain land quality, recycle nutrients, conserve water and energy and
control pests and weeds;
·
Conduct studies
of high-resource and low-resource agriculture to compare their
productivity and sustainability. The research should preferably be
conducted under various environmental and sociological settings;
·
Support research
on mechanization that would optimize human labour and animal power and
hand-held and animal-drawn equipment that can be easily operated and
maintained. The development of farm technologies should take into
account farmers' available resources and the role of animals in farming
households and the ecology.
(c) Human resource development
32.13. Governments, with the support of
multilateral and bilateral development agencies and scientific
organizations, should develop curricula for agricultural colleges and
training institutions that would integrate ecology into agricultural
science. Interdisciplinary programmes in agricultural ecology are
essential to the training of a new generation of agricultural scientists
and field-level extension agents.
(d) Capacity-building
32.14. Governments should, in the light of
each country's specific situation:
·
Create the
institutional and legal mechanisms to ensure effective land tenure to
farmers. The absence of legislation indicating land rights has been an
obstacle in taking action against land degradation in many farming
communities in developing countries;
·
Strengthen rural
institutions that would enhance sustainability through locally managed
credit systems and technical assistance, local production and
distribution facilities for inputs, appropriate equipment and
small-scale processing units, and marketing and distribution systems;
·
Establish
mechanisms to increase access of farmers, in particular women and
farmers from indigenous groups, to agricultural training, credit and use
of improved technology for ensuring food security.
* * * *
* In
this chapter, all references to "farmers" include all rural people who
derive their livelihood from activities such as farming, fishing and
forest harvesting. The term "farming" also includes fishing and forest
harvesting. |