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Articles

Is international agricultural research a global public good? The case of rice biofortification

Pages 67-80 | Published online: 13 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

The status of international agricultural research as a global public good (GPG) has been widely accepted since the Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. While the term was not used at the time of its creation, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) system that evolved at that time has been described as a ‘prime example of the promise, performance and perils of an international approach to providing GPGs’. Contemporary literature on international agricultural research as a GPG tends to support this view and focuses on how to operationalize the concept. This paper adopts a different starting point and questions this conceptualization of the CGIAR and its outputs. It questions the appropriateness of such a ‘neutral’ concept to a system born of the imperatives of Cold War geopolitics, and shaped by a history of attempts to secure its relevance in a changing world. This paper draws on a multi-sited, ethnographic study of a research effort highlighted by the CGIAR as an exemplar of GPG-oriented research. Behind the ubiquitous language of GPGs, ‘partnership’ and ‘consensus’, however, new forms of exclusion and restriction are emerging within everyday practice, reproducing North–South inequalities and undermining the ability of these programmes to respond to the needs of projected beneficiaries.

Notes

1Interview, HarvestPlus Advisory Board member, 18 September 2007.

2‘Engineering Rice for High Beta Carotene, Vitamin E and Enhanced Fe and Zn Bioavailability’; for project overview see: http://www.grandchallenges.org/IMPROVENUTRITION/CHALLENGES/NUTRIENTRICHPLANTS/Pages/Rice.aspx[Accessed 11 May 2010].

3Interview, Harvest Plus program management team member, 27 January 2006

4Improving Nutrition of Poor Women in Asia: Counterpart Project: 5945 - REG: Rice Breeding to Reduce Anaemia in Asia (2001–3). See www.adb.org/documents/prf/nutrition.asp[accessed on 10 November 2005].

5The Golden Rice research was funded by Rockefeller Foundation under the International Rice Biotechnology Programme (IRBP).

6Interview, nutritionist, University of the Philippines, Los Baños, 21 June 2006.

7Interview, Harvest Plus project management team, 17 January 2006.

8Interviews, nutritionists: USAID, 25 January and 2 February and HarvestPlus, 28 March 2006.

9Interview, IRRI senior management, 24 May 2006.

12Interview, IRRI senior management, 5 December 2006.

14Interview, NARS Scientist, 16 January 2007.

10For current membership of the Humanitarian Board see: http://www.goldenrice.org/Content1-Who/who1_humbo.html [Accessed 24 May 2009].

11Interview, IRRI senior management, 5 December 2006.

13‘Grand Challenges in Global Health Project’ by the ProVitaMinRice Consortium. Available from: http://www.goldenrice.org/Content5-GCGH/GCGH1.html[Accessed 24 October 2010].

15Interview, HarvestPlus, nutritionist, 28 March 2006 (original emphasis).

16‘Copenhagen Consensus 2004: today's challenge, tomorrow's opportunity: the experts list’, available from: http://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/default.aspx?id=158 [Accessed 24 October 2010].

17Interviews, IRRI and PhilRice scientists, June 2007.

18Interview, nutritionist, HarvestPlus, 26 March 2006.

19Interview, nutritionist, WHO, 14 March 2006.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Sally Brooks

I would like to thank the anonymous reviewers of this article for their helpful comments. The financial support of the UK Economic and Social Research Council, which funded the work on which this paper is based, is also gratefully acknowledged.

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