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HomeTAP FrameworkConceptual Diagram of an Agricultural Innovation System

Conceptual Diagram of an Agricultural Innovation System



An Agricultural Innovation System (AIS) is a network of actors − individuals or organizations − which together with supporting institutions and policies in the agricultural and related sectors, bring existing or new products, processes, and forms of organization into social and economic use. Policies and institutions (formal and informal) shape the way that these actors interact, generate, share and use knowledge as well as jointly learn. The AIS comprises four components: research and education; bridging institutions; business and enterprise; and the enabling environment.

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Research and Education

Potential roles of the Education institutes include:
  • Improving general education level of all actors.
  • Education and training of professionals in the agricultural sector.
  • Development of better knowledge and associated skills for farmers and other actors.
  • Facilitating investment in human resources for process and product development.
  • Developing approaches and methods of experiential and multi-actor learning.
Agricultural Research institutions play the following roles, among others:
  • Developing and improving technologies, practices, and processes relevant to local/regional/national contexts.
  • (Joint) testing of locally developed (indigenous) technologies and processes.
  • Documenting the ways new practices and technologies are adapted and further innovated to feed into other agricultural research efforts and policy decisions.
  • Cooperating with researchers of other countries/international organizations, and/or other disciplines/sectors.

Bridging Institutions

Stakeholder Platforms contribute to the AIS bringing together all social actors having direct or indirect interests in a particular issue or problem.

Agricultural Extension actors can have a role such as brokering knowledge between farmers and other actors; making new technology and practices available to farmers and other actors; forging networks, and supporting organization of producers; facilitating access to credit, inputs and outputs services.

Contractual arrangements can be used to facilitate linkages amongst relevant actors, such as contracts between buyers and producers, between research and farmer organizations.

Business and Enterprise:

Business and enterprise are key in AIS playing different roles:
Farmer/ farm family:
  • Use knowledge to create, test and adapt new technologies to field conditions to produce food, feed etc.
  • Apply and suggest innovative products and practices to increase agricultural productivity and market access.
Farmer Organizations:
  • Represent farmers (interests, needs, opportunities) in value chains and the community and policy arenas.
  • Broker knowledge and technology between farmers and other actors.
  • Facilitate access to agricultural inputs, credit and markets.
  • Help organize value chain.
  • Promote specific innovation through collaborative research and organizing logistic support.
Agro-dealers (input suppliers and processing):
  • Provide (new) agricultural inputs and output markets.
  • Identify, pilot and mainstream new market opportunities.
  • Define quality standards of agricultural products.
  • Facilitate investment in physical and human resources for product and process development.
  • Link agricultural actors to rest of the market.
Consumer organizations:
  • Influence research priorities and innovation practices.
  • Facilitate consumer acceptance.
  • Facilitate and broker information of new products and processes.

Enabling Environment

The enabling environment of AIS consists of a set of factors that influences agricultural innovation and is controlled by governance, regulatory and policy-making organizational structures other than those directly linked to agricultural innovation. The concept of the enabling environment is very broad, including both “intangible” components, such as social conventions and rules of action, values and beliefs, social habits, etc., as well as “tangible” aspects linked to the formal structures dealing with governance, formal rules and regulations, and policy aspects. The enabling environment creates the incentives for interaction, exchange of knowledge and collaborative action of all actors in the system.



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TAPipedia has been developed under the project “Capacity Development for Agricultural Innovation Systems (CDAIS)” jointly implemented by Agrinatura-EEIG and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) with the financial assistance of the European Union. The views expressed herein can in no way be taken to reflect the official opinion of the European Union and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
The TAPipedia website is hosted by Global Forum on Agricultural Research and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This license applies to all contents on the website except where expressedly indicated on the page or in the document and except for contents aggregated from other websites, in which case the original licensing applies.
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