Section A: Overview, Institutional Change and Scaling.- Chapter 1 - Overview.- Chapter 2 - Innovation models to deliver value at scale: the RTB Program.- Chapter 3 - Scaling Readiness: learnings from applying a novel approach to support scaling of food system innovations.- Section B: Processing, Marketing and Distribution.- Chapter 4 - Cost-effective cassava processing: Case study of small-scale flash dryer reengineering.- Chapter 5 - Orange-Fleshed Sweetpotato Puree, a Breakthrough Product for the Bakery Sector in Africa.- Chapter 6 - Turning waste to wealth: Harnessing the potential of cassava peels for nutritious animal feed.- Chapter 7 - Transferring cassava processing technology from Brazil to Africa.- Chapter 8 - Improving Safety of Cassava Products.- Section C: Enhancing productivity.- Chapter 9 - Innovative digital technologies to monitor and control pest and disease threats in root, tuber, and banana (RTB) cropping systems: Progress and prospects.- Chapter 10 - Scaling banana bacterial wilt management through single diseased stem removal in the Great Lakes Region.- Chapter 11 - Toolbox for Working with Root, Tuber and Banana Seed Systems.- Chapter 12. Securing sweetpotato planting material for farmers in dryland Africa: Gender-responsive communication approaches to scale Triple S.- Chapter 13 - Revolutionizing early generation seed potato in East Africa.- Chapter 14: Transforming Yam Seed Systems in West Africa.- Chapter 15 - Commercially sustainable cassava seed systems in Africa.- Chapter 16 - Building demand-led and gender-responsive breeding programs.- Section D: Improving livelihoods.- Chapter 17 - Scaling Readiness of Biofortified Root, Tuber, and Banana Crops for Africa.
Graham Thiele is director of the CGIAR Research Program on
Roots, Tubers and Bananas, led by the International Potato Center
(CIP), bringing together multiple partners to improve food security
and reduce rural poverty through research for development. He holds
an MSc in Agricultural Economics from the University of London and
a PhD in Anthropology from Cambridge. He began his career at the
UK’s Department for International Development (now the Foreign,
Commonwealth & Development Office) in 1984 working on market
studies, farming systems, and research-extension liaison. He joined
CIP in 1994, developing, and disseminating approaches for promoting
innovation in value chains through public-private partnerships and
contributing to participatory varietal selection and seed system
development. In 2005, he became the leader of CIP’s Social Sciences
Division, working on targeting, priority setting, and adoption
studies of new agricultural technology and participatory methods.
He has mentored and backstopped projects in Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador,
Benin, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Tanzania, the Philippines, and
Indonesia. He has authored over 70 peer-reviewed articles, two
books, numerous book chapters and magazine pieces.
Michael Friedmann joined the CGIAR Research Program on
Roots, Tubers and Bananas in 2015, where he is the Senior Science
Officer. He provides strategic scientific support to the program,
linking research across disciplines from genomics and breeding to
seed systems and post-harvest processing of root, tuber and banana
products. He holds a PhD in Horticulture from Washington State
University, and post-doctoral work in cancer research and
immunology at the National Institutes of Health of the USA. He has
over 30 years of experience in project management, science research
and plant breeding, both in academia and private industry. Has
published in numerous disciplines, from tomato breeding to human
immunology with over 35 peer-reviewed articles.
Hugo Campos PhD (John Innes Centre, UK), MBA (Universidad
del Desarrollo, Chile), with over 20 years of professional
experience in large corporations and in international development.
He serves as Director of Research at the International Potato
Center. Hands-on experience in the USA, Africa, Asia and
Latin-America informs his extensive publication record, including
four previous books: Principles of Plant Breeding 2nd Edition,
cowritten with Jack Brown and Peter Caligari (Wiley-Blackwell),
Genetic Improvement of Tropical Crops, coedited with Peter Caligari
(Springer), The Potato Crop, coedited with Oscar Ortiz (Springer),
and The Innovation Revolution in Agriculture - A Roadmap to Value
Creation (Springer).
Vivian Polar is the Gender and Innovation Senior Specialist
in the CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas, which
she joined in 2017. She provides strategic support to
theprogram, advancing research on gender and social inclusion
across technical topics. She holds an MSc in Sustainable
Rural Development from Tomás Frías University in Bolivia and a PhD
in Social Sciences from the School of Oriental and African Studies,
University of London. She began her career working on plant
breeding, seed systems and farmer participation, linking the
private sector and national research institutions with farmer
organizations. She has over 20 years of field experience working
with farmers and indigenous peoples in developing countries on
empowerment for agricultural innovation, adaptation to climate
change and food security
Jeffery W Bentley is an agricultural anthropologist (Ph.D.,
University of Arizona). He has studied the changing farming
practices of smallholders in Portugal. He worked for seven years at
the Pan-American Agricultural University (El Zamorano) in Honduras,
where he collaborated with scientists and familyfarmers on
alternative pest control, and wrote a dictionary of campesino
Spanish. He co-developed the plant clinic approach (with Eric Boa)
at CABI and has consulted widely in Latin America, Africa and South
Asia. His work with Agro-Insight includes writing scripts for
farmer learning videos, and documenting how people respond
creatively to watching the programs. At RTB, Bentley has studied
cassava seed systems in Nigeria and has co-edited and written
various publications on seed systems and innovations, including the
last four annual stakeholder reports
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