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    World Agroforestry (ICRAF) is a centre of science and development excellence that harnesses the benefits of trees for people and the environment. Leveraging the world’s largest repository of agroforestry science and information, we develop knowledge practices, from farmers’ fields to the global sphere, to ensure food security and environmental sustainability.

     

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    Driven by our vision of a world where all people have viable livelihoods supported by healthy and productive landscapes, our global team of science, research, development, institutional and resource professionals seeks to better combine the science of discovery with the science of delivery. To realize this vision, we focus on four key interacting themes: By combining more productive trees with more resilient and profitable agricultural systems and a sounder understanding of the health of the soil, land and people that is part of ‘greener’, better governed landscapes, we offer valuable and timely knowledge products and services to the global community as it tackles the major challenges of the Anthropocene. These include dealing with climate change; low soil carbon; widespread forest, tree and soil loss leading to degradation; poverty; demographic upheavals and conflict; and securing equitable futures for all with a special focus on women and children.

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    A climate change atlas for Africa of tree species prioritized for forest landscape…

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    The Resources for Tree Planting Platform

    The Resources for Tree Planting Platform explains how to go about sourcing good quality

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    Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to support tree research and development activities. Version 3.0
    Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to support tree…
    Suggested citation: Kindt R, John I, Dawson IK, Graudal L, Lillesø J-P B, Ordonez J, Jamnadass R. 2022. Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to…
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  • CIFOR-ICRAF
    Check out cifor-icraf.org!

    The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR and World Agroforestry (ICRAF) joined forces in 2019, leveraging a combined 65 years’ experience in research on the role of forests and trees in solving critical global challenges.

    CIFOR-ICRAF sub menu

    • Home
    • About
    • Research
    • Locations
    • Knowledge
    • News
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    Footer menu

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Careers
    • Tree Seed Info
    • Agroforestry World
    • CIFOR-ICRAF privacy notice
    • Corporate Documents
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    • Global Landscapes Forum
    © 2021 World Agroforestry All rights reserved.
    To report issues related to research ethics, fraud, harassment and other forms of wrongdoing visit the ICRAF Anonymous Reporting Platform
    Stay informed

    ICRAF publishes content on a regular basis. Subscribe and stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends on agroforestry

    Subscribe
  • About
    About

    World Agroforestry (ICRAF) is a centre of science and development excellence that harnesses the benefits of trees for people and the environment. Leveraging the world’s largest repository of agroforestry science and information, we develop knowledge practices, from farmers’ fields to the global sphere, to ensure food security and environmental sustainability.

     

    About menu

    • About ICRAF
    • Our History
    • Corporate Documents
    • CIFOR-ICRAF Merger
    • What is Agroforestry?

    About Us Submenu

    • Board of Trustees
    • Management Team
    • Careers
    • Policies and Guidelines

    Footer menu

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Careers
    • Tree Seed Info
    • Agroforestry World
    • CIFOR-ICRAF privacy notice
    • Corporate Documents
    • Labs
    • Intranet
    • Global Landscapes Forum
    © 2021 World Agroforestry All rights reserved.
    To report issues related to research ethics, fraud, harassment and other forms of wrongdoing visit the ICRAF Anonymous Reporting Platform
    Stay informed

    ICRAF publishes content on a regular basis. Subscribe and stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends on agroforestry

    Subscribe
  • Research
    Research

    Driven by our vision of a world where all people have viable livelihoods supported by healthy and productive landscapes, our global team of science, research, development, institutional and resource professionals seeks to better combine the science of discovery with the science of delivery. To realize this vision, we focus on four key interacting themes: By combining more productive trees with more resilient and profitable agricultural systems and a sounder understanding of the health of the soil, land and people that is part of ‘greener’, better governed landscapes, we offer valuable and timely knowledge products and services to the global community as it tackles the major challenges of the Anthropocene. These include dealing with climate change; low soil carbon; widespread forest, tree and soil loss leading to degradation; poverty; demographic upheavals and conflict; and securing equitable futures for all with a special focus on women and children.

    Research Menu

    • Research Areas
    • Publications
    • Programmes
    • Projects
    • Resource Centre
    • Discover Agroforestry
    A climate change atlas for Africa of tree species prioritized for forest landscape…

    Our Climate Change Atlas for African trees shows how alterations in environmental condi

    Read More
    The Resources for Tree Planting Platform

    The Resources for Tree Planting Platform explains how to go about sourcing good quality

    Read More
    Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to support tree research and development activities. Version 3.0
    Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to support tree…
    Suggested citation: Kindt R, John I, Dawson IK, Graudal L, Lillesø J-P B, Ordonez J, Jamnadass R. 2022. Agroforestry Species Switchboard: a synthesis of information sources to…
    Read More

    Footer menu

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    • Agroforestry World
    • CIFOR-ICRAF privacy notice
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    © 2021 World Agroforestry All rights reserved.
    To report issues related to research ethics, fraud, harassment and other forms of wrongdoing visit the ICRAF Anonymous Reporting Platform
    Stay informed

    ICRAF publishes content on a regular basis. Subscribe and stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends on agroforestry

    Subscribe
  • Regions
    Regions

    World Agroforestry works throughout the Global South with footprints in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Our activities span over 44 countries in six regions. Each office oversees, plans, coordinates and supports initiatives within their region, and maintains liaisons and partnerships with governments, development partners, learning institutions and civil society

    Region menu

    • Eastern & Southern Africa
    • West & Central Africa
    • Latin America
    • East & Central Asia
    • South Asia
    • Southeast Asia
    Eswatini
    Ethiopia
    Kenya
    Lesotho
    Malawi
    Rwanda
    Somalia
    Tanzania
    Uganda
    Zambia
    China
    Kyrgyzstan
    Brazil
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    © 2021 World Agroforestry All rights reserved.
    To report issues related to research ethics, fraud, harassment and other forms of wrongdoing visit the ICRAF Anonymous Reporting Platform
    Stay informed

    ICRAF publishes content on a regular basis. Subscribe and stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends on agroforestry

    Subscribe
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    Keep up to date with our latest news stories. Learn about our innovative research, programmes and global partnerships.

    News&Events Menu

    • Press Releases
    • ICRAF in the Media
    • News
    Use dirt solution for carbon pollution, says expert
    Read More
    In Kenya, a community regrew its forest — and redefined reforestation success
    Read More
    Our Global Food Systems Are Rife with Injustice: Here’s How We Can Change This
    Read More

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    • Agroforestry World
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    © 2021 World Agroforestry All rights reserved.
    To report issues related to research ethics, fraud, harassment and other forms of wrongdoing visit the ICRAF Anonymous Reporting Platform
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    ICRAF publishes content on a regular basis. Subscribe and stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends on agroforestry

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Media Release| Researchers call for the Convention on Biological Diversity to focus on agricultural landscapes to aid recovery from COVID-19
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Date posted
14 Aug 2020
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Press Release


Researchers argue that agriculture’s contribution to protecting biodiversity needs to be better addressed in the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework


Nairobi, Kenya, 14 August 2020 — Researchers are urging the delegates of the 196 parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity to ensure that the post-2020 global biodiversity framework is a successful tool for building biodiverse, inclusive, resilient and safe food systems for all. 

Writing in Environmental Research Letters, a team of researchers from some of the world’s most respected research and development organizations — World Agroforestry (ICRAF), International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Centro Agronomico Tropical de Investigacion y Ensenanza, Switzerland’s Federal Office for Agriculture, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and the Indian School of Business — argue that COVID-19 has exposed the vulnerability of our economies to shocks, has laid bare deep inequalities in our societies that threaten to derail the Sustainable Development Goals and that a key to addressing these vulnerabilities is ensuring that the world’s agricultural systems operate within a framework of enhancing biodiversity.

‘Governments around the world are looking for recovery options that deliver new jobs and businesses,’ says Anja Gassner, lead author of the study and coordinator of the Trees on Farms for Biodiversity project. ‘Few sectors link job creation so closely to sustainable green production as the food sector. It is the largest source of employment in many countries in the global South. At the same time, cities depend upon imported food that is produced in far-away countries and shipped around the world. The trillions of dollars to be invested in recovery from COVID-19 offers an unprecedented opportunity for a clean, green and just transition to a more biodiversity-friendly agricultural and food system.’

Key among the political opportunities to shift the post-pandemic world towards sustainability and resilience of biodiversity-responsive food systems are the ongoing deliberations on the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework. The Framework will be the precedent for national governments to bridge economic action with the pressing need for a green, resilient recovery.

The Convention on Biological Diversity and its Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020 have concentrated global efforts to ensure the protection of natural ecosystems and species reflected in quantifiable targets, as well as to halt further expansion of the threats from agriculture and other productive sectors into natural ecosystems. 

However, the Convention does not explicitly recognize the importance of mixed agricultural landscapes for their contribution to conservation. As well, the discussion among members of the Convention has only been that, ‘sustainably managed agriculture is a gateway to achieving biodiversity conservation’, wording that doesn’t capture the full suite of actions in agricultural landscapes to achieve protection of species and provision of key ecosystem services.

‘The Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020 has not explicitly recognized the importance of mixed, diverse agricultural landscapes for their contribution to the conservation of wild biodiversity,’ says Philip Dobie, second author and senior fellow at ICRAF. ‘The Convention has an opportunity under the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework process to bring its influence to bear on international policy that favours investments in local production and marketing to replace imported foods. This will contribute to both COVID-19 recovery through the creation of rural jobs and income and empowering governments and consumers to support diverse, mixed agricultural systems that conserve and enhance biodiversity as well as reduce greenhouse gas emissions.’

‘The current Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework discussions need to mainstream the contributions of agriculture as habitat for species and a source of critical ecosystem services across targets, monitoring elements and indicators in a more systematic manner,’ says Adriana Vidal, senior forest policy officer at IUCN. ‘When talking about conservation and restoration of ecosystems and species, parties should consider that the implementation of targets will occur in natural and managed ecosystems, such as agricultural landscapes. It is key to expand the view that agricultural landscapes’ only contribution is for food systems and re-affirm the importance of these landscapes to conservation and restoration goals.' 

Agricultural land takes up between 30% and 40% of the Earth’s land surface and, hence, has a disproportionate effect on biodiversity, climate change and human wellbeing. The EAT-Lancet 2019 report, Food in the Anthropocene, is a leading policy statement on the state of today’s food systems and the urgent need for change. The report’s authors concluded that, ‘Unhealthy and unsustainably produced food poses a global risk to people and the planet’ and that a ‘Transformation to healthy diets from sustainable food systems is necessary to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement, and scientific targets for healthy diets and sustainable food production are needed to guide a Great Food Transformation’. One of its main recommendations was to re-orient agricultural priorities from a focus on quantity to quality of food that delivers healthy diets and enhances biodiversity.

The Convention on Biological Diversity represents most of the world’s governments. Bringing agriculture and food production to the fore in the Post-2020 Framework will ensure that the trillions of dollars to be invested in recovery from COVID-19 offers will result in a clean, green and just transition to a more biodiversity-friendly agricultural and food system.
 
Read the journal article
Gassner A, Dobie P, Harrison R, Vidal A, Somarriba E, Pythoud F, Kumar C, Laumonier Y, Chhatra A. 2020. Making the post-2020 global biodiversity framework a successful tool for building biodiverse, inclusive, resilient and safe food systems for all. Environmental Research Letters 11 August. Updated on 17 September 2020


 
MEDIA ENQUIRIES: SUSAN ONYANGO, GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS COORDINATOR, ICRAF: s.onyango@cgiar.org  

About World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
World Agroforestry (ICRAF) is a centre of scientific and development excellence that harnesses the benefits of trees for people and the environment. Knowledge produced by ICRAF enables governments, development agencies and farmers to utilize the power of trees to make farming and livelihoods more environmentally, socially and economically sustainable at multiple scales. ICRAF is one of the 15 members of the CGIAR, a global research partnership for a food-secure future. We thank all donors who support research in development through their contributions to the CGIAR Fund.

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