Traditional knowledge and agricultural sustainability
Food and agricultural production are perhaps the major areas in
which in recent years some scientists and development planners have sought new
approaches based on the wisdom and knowledge of traditional peoples. The "Green
Revolution" technologies (widespread use of new seeds, chemical fertilizers, and
pesticides) introduced after World War II increased food production. However,
the costs of this technology transfer, while not immediately evident, are high
soil erosion and loss of plant genetic materials that were resistant to pests
and other diseases.
Dr. Ntombie Gata, Deputy Director of the Department of Research
and Specialist Services of the Zimbabwe Ministry of Lands, Agriculture and Water
Development, stressed the importance of traditional knowledge in agricultural
development, especially in Africa. She noted that development theory has tended
to focus on disparate factors such as land, labor, and capital; technology;
socioeconomic conditions; gender; and, more recently, indigenous technology and
knowledge systems. However, she said, "We can't afford shunting back and forth
in the train of development picking one factor at a time sometimes picking the
wrong factor. We must seriously examine what it really takes to socially,
economically, and environmentally develop sustainably."
Scientific Validity of Indigenous Agricultural Knowledge
The current crisis in African agricultural production, Dr. Gata
said, demands a change in attitudes and approaches on the part of governments
and donor agencies. There must be, she said, a deeper respect for indigenous
knowledge, and a commitment to incorporate it into development policies and
projects.
Indigenous agricultural practices, reflect the store of
experience and knowledge accumulated literally over thousands of years based on
sound understanding of soils, plants, and the environment. [This] knowledge is
revealed through various practices that are used in crop production, for
example, forecasting seasonality, conservation of crop/plant diversity, mixed
cropping, land fallowing, and others associated with soil and crop management
systems....
Farmers deliberately influenced the natural processes of
mutation by careful seed selection over centuries. They developed an intricate
range of crop variability generated by sophisticated knowledge.
Dr. Gata stressed the scientific validity of traditional
agricultural knowledge. In Zimbabwe, for example, farmers are able to predict
the onset of rain using such signs as changes in leaf color of some tree
species, shifts in wind direction, cloud formation, temperature and relative
humidity fluctuations, and bird and beetle songs and their seasonal migration.
These signs," she said, "are crucial in decision-making relating to land
preparation, planting and choice of plants....
She went on to discuss the role of women in traditional
agricultural systems.
Indigenous women are excellent sources of both genetic and
cultural information on plant and animal species, because they have to meet
multiple needs within their sphere of household activities.... Women play a
crucial role in selecting seed with preferred characteristics, such as color,
size, genetic stability, disease tolerance, palatability, storage, and
processing.
Working classifications of crops by gender show that crops with
multiple uses in form and function (for example, pumpkin and cow peas) are
considered women's crops. [This illustrates] the central role played by women in
maintaining genetic diversity, which ensures options for responding to
environmental changes.
Local Knowledge and Sustainability
Dr. Gata emphasized that agricultural science and technology are
not neutral but are deeply rooted in a society's history and culture. Failure to
respect other people's knowledge and culture has led to the imposition of alien
technologies that often undermine local people's self-confidence. Dr. Gata
pointed out: "Failure to recognize the farmer's point of view and analysis has
meant that the farmers have never really been part of most development
initiatives."
As a counter approach, Dr. Gata and several of her colleagues in
Southern Africa are looking toward a new partnership with grassroots communities
for the common purpose of promoting sustainable resource use in agricultural
development. In this partnership the traditional farmers' knowledge will form
the basis for development projects and researcher and extension agent training
programs.
Emmanuel Asibey, Senior Ecologist in the Southern Africa
Agricultural and Environment Division of the World Bank, described one of these
training programs that will be launched in Zimbabwe and other Southern African
countries. Its purpose is to study indigenous agricultural and land-use
knowledge from village elders and to incorporate this knowledge in training
workshops for government research and extension agents. If the program proves
successful in Southern Africa, it will be extended to other parts of the
continent. Similar programs are being introduced in other parts of the world, as
witnessed by the growing international network of indigenous knowledge scholars
and applied research centers (see Appendix 3).
In designing these training programs, it is also important, Dr.
Gata suggested, to include indigenous women, who are often the repositories of
traditional knowledge about plants, seeds, medicines, and other natural
products. In many countries women are the key to the survival of traditional
agricultural and land-use practices. Some advances have been made, especially in
countries such as Zimbabwe, in increasing the number of women attending national
agronomy schools and in using local women as agricultural extensionists.
However, much more attention needs to be focused on the agro-ecological
knowledge possessed by rural indigenous women, and how this knowledge can be
usefully incorporated in national agricultural curricula and teaching materials
and in local extension programs.
For a project to succeed, local people must be involved, not
just in supplying labor but in making crucial decisions. Projects must be based
on people's own ideas and knowledge of their farming systems. Such an approach
will change the ownership of projects from development agencies to the people. -
Ntombie
Gata