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Water, Energy, And The Environment
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+4
AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme (Africa)
Deadline: 4th October 2024
Grant size: Fellowship
Donor: AREF Research Development
The Africa Research Excellence Fund is pleased to launch the call for the 2024/25 AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme.
Programme Overview
Aim. To support researchers in Africa who are emerging leaders and working on important challenges for human health, to develop their skills as a researcher.
What we offer. A three to nine-month placement at a leading research institution in the UK, Europe or Africa, with additional support at your home institution before and after the placement. Up to £47,000 available
Who is eligible? Early career researchers. These are research active post-doctoral scientists and clinicians with higher qualifications who are nationals of and employed in Africa (see detailed eligibility criteria).
How to apply. Read the guidance documents carefully before developing your proposal and starting your application. Complete the application form via the portal at https://programmes.aref-africa.org.uk/
https://africaresearchexcellencefund.org.uk/funding-calls/open-funding-research-development-fellowship-2024-25/
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+4
AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme (Africa)
Deadline: 4th October 2024
Grant size: Fellowship
Donor: AREF Research Development
The Africa Research Excellence Fund is pleased to launch the call for the 2024/25 AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme.
Programme Overview
Aim. To support researchers in Africa who are emerging leaders and working on important challenges for human health, to develop their skills as a researcher.
What we offer. A three to nine-month placement at a leading research institution in the UK, Europe or Africa, with additional support at your home institution before and after the placement. Up to £47,000 available
Who is eligible? Early career researchers. These are research active post-doctoral scientists and clinicians with higher qualifications who are nationals of and employed in Africa (see detailed eligibility criteria).
How to apply. Read the guidance documents carefully before developing your proposal and starting your application. Complete the application form via the portal at https://programmes.aref-africa.org.uk/
https://africaresearchexcellencefund.org.uk/funding-calls/open-funding-research-development-fellowship-2024-25/
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By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+2
Hallo everyone, This is Josh Maiyo joining from USIU-Africa in Nairobi, Kenya. I am interested in the intersection between the political ecology of development, natural resource governance and social justice. Looking forward to fruitful collaborations.
By:
Josh Maiyo
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+2
Hallo everyone, This is Josh Maiyo joining from USIU-Africa in Nairobi, Kenya. I am interested in the intersection between the political ecology of development, natural resource governance and social justice. Looking forward to fruitful collaborations.
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By:
Josh Maiyo
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+4
Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program
Grant Size: $100,000 to $500,000
Donor: Spencer Foundation
The Spencer Foundation is pleased to announce the Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program to support education research projects that engage in collaborative and participatory partnerships. They view partnerships as an important approach to knowledge generation and the improvement of education, broadly construed. Rigorous partnership work is intentionally organized to engage diverse forms of expertise and perspectives, across practitioners, scholars, and organizations, as well as disciplines and methods, in knowledge generation around pressing problems of practice and/or policy. This grant program is open to existing partnerships between researchers and a broad array of practitioners. For example, practitioners might work in school districts, county offices of education, state educational organizations, universities, community-based organizations, and other social sectors that significantly impact learners’ lives.
https://www.spencer.org/grant_types/research-practice-partnerships
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+4
Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program
Grant Size: $100,000 to $500,000
Donor: Spencer Foundation
The Spencer Foundation is pleased to announce the Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program to support education research projects that engage in collaborative and participatory partnerships. They view partnerships as an important approach to knowledge generation and the improvement of education, broadly construed. Rigorous partnership work is intentionally organized to engage diverse forms of expertise and perspectives, across practitioners, scholars, and organizations, as well as disciplines and methods, in knowledge generation around pressing problems of practice and/or policy. This grant program is open to existing partnerships between researchers and a broad array of practitioners. For example, practitioners might work in school districts, county offices of education, state educational organizations, universities, community-based organizations, and other social sectors that significantly impact learners’ lives.
https://www.spencer.org/grant_types/research-practice-partnerships
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By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+1
CFAs: Supporting African Science and Tertiary Education (SASTE) Grant
Grant Size: $1000-10,000
Donor: Agency for Education and Internationalisation
The Supporting African Science and Tertiary Education (SASTE) Grant support post-docs from Sub Sahara Africa working in the field of Agriculture, Forestry, Water Management, Renewable Energies, Nutritional Science, Human and Veterinary Medicine for a research stay in Austria.
https://oead.at/de/aktuelles/artikel/2024/07/call-for-application-supporting-african-science-and-tertiary-education-saste-grant-3rd-call
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+1
CFAs: Supporting African Science and Tertiary Education (SASTE) Grant
Grant Size: $1000-10,000
Donor: Agency for Education and Internationalisation
The Supporting African Science and Tertiary Education (SASTE) Grant support post-docs from Sub Sahara Africa working in the field of Agriculture, Forestry, Water Management, Renewable Energies, Nutritional Science, Human and Veterinary Medicine for a research stay in Austria.
https://oead.at/de/aktuelles/artikel/2024/07/call-for-application-supporting-african-science-and-tertiary-education-saste-grant-3rd-call
Read more
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+6
African Futures Cohort 5 - Call for Scholars
The Alliance for African Partnership (AAP) is seeking applicants for the fifth cohort of the AAP African Futures Research Leadership Program. This competitive visiting scholar program supports early career researchers from the AAP consortium to work for one year under the mentorship of faculty members from MSU and their home institution, focusing on building skills in research for impact, writing scholarly and/or policy publications, disseminating of research results, and developing grant proposals for external support. Scholars will also participate in a structured professional development program while building bridges and lasting connections with MSU contacts and across their cohort.
The main objective of the African Futures program is to strengthen the capacity of a cadre of African researchers to return to their home institutions and become scientific leaders in their community, establish long-term partnerships with MSU faculty, co-create innovative solutions to Africa’s challenges, and in turn become trainers of the next generation of researchers. This program aims to address the gender gap in Africa, where only 30% of researchers are women, so scholars selected for the program will be women, or men who can demonstrate they are committed to support efforts towards gender equity in higher education institutions in Africa. The research areas that the scholars will engage in during the program should be aligned to AAP's research priority areas.
The AAP Management Team requests applications from early career researchers to participate in the next cohort, with work to begin virtually in February 2025. Scholars will spend September – December 2025 at MSU for the in-person portion of the program, followed by another period of virtual collaboration, ending in early 2026. The scholar and mentor team will receive a small grant for research and professional development activities including conference attendance and publication. Scholars will also receive a stipend during their time at MSU, visa application support, and round-trip travel from their home institution.
Potential Research Areas
Selected scholars will work in one of AAP’s seven priority areas:
Agri-food systems
Water, Energy, and Environment
Culture and Society
Youth Empowerment
Education
Health and Nutrition
Science, Technology, and Innovation
Selected scholars will be paired with an MSU mentor and commit to working with the MSU mentor and the home institution mentor for the duration of the program.
Program Benefits
Professional development activities – AAP will offer structured professional development workshops centered on topics such as building equitable partnerships, academic time management, proposal development and budgeting, research communication, etc. to establish professional trajectories, to build research, writing, and publishing skills, and to support scholars to move through various stages of review, promotion, and growth.
Leadership activities – this will center on a research leadership retreat to expose scholars to the key competencies of research leaders, the work that research leaders engage in, personal reflection on their characteristics and career goals to help determine the pathway to advancement to research leadership.
Collaboration networks – the early career researcher will be co-mentored by an MSU faculty member and a faculty member from their home institution. Mentors will have the opportunity to visit their counterpart for one week during the duration of the program. The scholar will also gain access to AAP’s broad network of researchers at MSU, across Africa, and beyond. Proposed activities should ultimately lead to potential long-term collaborations between MSU and the partner institution.
Expected Outcomes
Each scholar and mentors are expected to produce the following outputs, at minimum, by the end of the program:
Submission or evidence of publication of one to three joint manuscripts
At least one grant proposal application
At least one conference presentation
Collaborations with mentors are meant to be long-term and continue after the end of the program. Scholars are encouraged to network with MSU faculty beyond their mentor while at MSU. Scholars are expected to submit regular progress reports to AAP and their home institution focal point. Failure to meet program and mentor expectations can result in early dismissal.
Eligibility
Citizen of an African country
Completion of a PhD degree within the last 10 years
Employed as an Academic Staff member at one of the AAP African consortium universities including Egerton University, Makerere University, University of Dar es Salaam, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Botswana, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, University Cheikh Anta Diop, University of Arts and Humanities, Bamako, United States International University-Africa, and University of Pretoria
Have documented approval of leave or sabbatical to participate in the program for the in-person period
Have a mentor at their home institution that will serve as a collaborator and mentor
Research must be in one of the AAP priority areas
Applicants may only submit one proposal to AAP in this round of funding. Prior scholars are not eligible to apply.
Application Requirements
Applicants should provide the following documents as part of their application package:
An up-to-date curriculum vitae (CV) that provides a chronological review of their professional accomplishments
A letter of interest that demonstrates how their research interest and experience is aligned to the AAP research priority area and how they plan to implement long-term sustainable partnership (1 pages)
(for male applicants) include how they have supported efforts towards gender equity in higher education institutions in Africa
Names of potential mentors at MSU (applicants should browse relevant MSU department’s website to identify up to three faculty that are aligned with their research interests. Applicants should not contact MSU faculty directly - AAP will reach out on the applicant’s behalf)
Two publications in refereed journals related to their research area
Two professional references that detail the relationship to the applicant and provide specific examples of their assessment of the expertise of the applicant’s research area
A letter from the mentor at their home institution indicating willingness to serve as a collaborator during the program, travel to MSU for one week of collaboration discussions, and mentor the early career researcher when they return to their home institution (1 page)
A written endorsement from the applicants’ Head of Department approving leave (1 page)
A letter of support from the AAP Focal Point for the scholar’s application (1 page)
Selection Criteria:
Professional merit, scientific ability, potential career impact and future collaboration goals with MSU faculty (based on CV, letter of interest, publications, Head of dept and home mentor letters, and two reference letters)
Assurance and availability of resources from the home institution for a designated, funded position for the early career researcher upon completion of their fellowship (expressed in letter from head of Dept at the home institution)
Commitment to return to their home country following completion of training (expressed in a letter of interest)
The selection committee will ensure the best match of outstanding candidates and MSU mentors
Additional selection factors may include diversity in scientific research areas and geographic origin
Applications are due on August 18, 2024
Apply: https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_a60s40TOPXGO5sq
Additional program dates:
Program start date (virtual): February 2025
In-person program: Sept - Dec 2025
Program end date: February 2026
Questions
Please contact José Jackson-Malete at jacks184@msu.edu or +1 517-884-8587 with any questions.
By:
Justin Rabineau

AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+6
African Futures Cohort 5 - Call for Scholars
The Alliance for African Partnership (AAP) is seeking applicants for the fifth cohort of the AAP African Futures Research Leadership Program. This competitive visiting scholar program supports early career researchers from the AAP consortium to work for one year under the mentorship of faculty members from MSU and their home institution, focusing on building skills in research for impact, writing scholarly and/or policy publications, disseminating of research results, and developing grant proposals for external support. Scholars will also participate in a structured professional development program while building bridges and lasting connections with MSU contacts and across their cohort.
The main objective of the African Futures program is to strengthen the capacity of a cadre of African researchers to return to their home institutions and become scientific leaders in their community, establish long-term partnerships with MSU faculty, co-create innovative solutions to Africa’s challenges, and in turn become trainers of the next generation of researchers. This program aims to address the gender gap in Africa, where only 30% of researchers are women, so scholars selected for the program will be women, or men who can demonstrate they are committed to support efforts towards gender equity in higher education institutions in Africa. The research areas that the scholars will engage in during the program should be aligned to AAP's research priority areas.
The AAP Management Team requests applications from early career researchers to participate in the next cohort, with work to begin virtually in February 2025. Scholars will spend September – December 2025 at MSU for the in-person portion of the program, followed by another period of virtual collaboration, ending in early 2026. The scholar and mentor team will receive a small grant for research and professional development activities including conference attendance and publication. Scholars will also receive a stipend during their time at MSU, visa application support, and round-trip travel from their home institution.
Potential Research Areas
Selected scholars will work in one of AAP’s seven priority areas:
Agri-food systems
Water, Energy, and Environment
Culture and Society
Youth Empowerment
Education
Health and Nutrition
Science, Technology, and Innovation
Selected scholars will be paired with an MSU mentor and commit to working with the MSU mentor and the home institution mentor for the duration of the program.
Program Benefits
Professional development activities – AAP will offer structured professional development workshops centered on topics such as building equitable partnerships, academic time management, proposal development and budgeting, research communication, etc. to establish professional trajectories, to build research, writing, and publishing skills, and to support scholars to move through various stages of review, promotion, and growth.
Leadership activities – this will center on a research leadership retreat to expose scholars to the key competencies of research leaders, the work that research leaders engage in, personal reflection on their characteristics and career goals to help determine the pathway to advancement to research leadership.
Collaboration networks – the early career researcher will be co-mentored by an MSU faculty member and a faculty member from their home institution. Mentors will have the opportunity to visit their counterpart for one week during the duration of the program. The scholar will also gain access to AAP’s broad network of researchers at MSU, across Africa, and beyond. Proposed activities should ultimately lead to potential long-term collaborations between MSU and the partner institution.
Expected Outcomes
Each scholar and mentors are expected to produce the following outputs, at minimum, by the end of the program:
Submission or evidence of publication of one to three joint manuscripts
At least one grant proposal application
At least one conference presentation
Collaborations with mentors are meant to be long-term and continue after the end of the program. Scholars are encouraged to network with MSU faculty beyond their mentor while at MSU. Scholars are expected to submit regular progress reports to AAP and their home institution focal point. Failure to meet program and mentor expectations can result in early dismissal.
Eligibility
Citizen of an African country
Completion of a PhD degree within the last 10 years
Employed as an Academic Staff member at one of the AAP African consortium universities including Egerton University, Makerere University, University of Dar es Salaam, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Botswana, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, University Cheikh Anta Diop, University of Arts and Humanities, Bamako, United States International University-Africa, and University of Pretoria
Have documented approval of leave or sabbatical to participate in the program for the in-person period
Have a mentor at their home institution that will serve as a collaborator and mentor
Research must be in one of the AAP priority areas
Applicants may only submit one proposal to AAP in this round of funding. Prior scholars are not eligible to apply.
Application Requirements
Applicants should provide the following documents as part of their application package:
An up-to-date curriculum vitae (CV) that provides a chronological review of their professional accomplishments
A letter of interest that demonstrates how their research interest and experience is aligned to the AAP research priority area and how they plan to implement long-term sustainable partnership (1 pages)
(for male applicants) include how they have supported efforts towards gender equity in higher education institutions in Africa
Names of potential mentors at MSU (applicants should browse relevant MSU department’s website to identify up to three faculty that are aligned with their research interests. Applicants should not contact MSU faculty directly - AAP will reach out on the applicant’s behalf)
Two publications in refereed journals related to their research area
Two professional references that detail the relationship to the applicant and provide specific examples of their assessment of the expertise of the applicant’s research area
A letter from the mentor at their home institution indicating willingness to serve as a collaborator during the program, travel to MSU for one week of collaboration discussions, and mentor the early career researcher when they return to their home institution (1 page)
A written endorsement from the applicants’ Head of Department approving leave (1 page)
A letter of support from the AAP Focal Point for the scholar’s application (1 page)
Selection Criteria:
Professional merit, scientific ability, potential career impact and future collaboration goals with MSU faculty (based on CV, letter of interest, publications, Head of dept and home mentor letters, and two reference letters)
Assurance and availability of resources from the home institution for a designated, funded position for the early career researcher upon completion of their fellowship (expressed in letter from head of Dept at the home institution)
Commitment to return to their home country following completion of training (expressed in a letter of interest)
The selection committee will ensure the best match of outstanding candidates and MSU mentors
Additional selection factors may include diversity in scientific research areas and geographic origin
Applications are due on August 18, 2024
Apply: https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_a60s40TOPXGO5sq
Additional program dates:
Program start date (virtual): February 2025
In-person program: Sept - Dec 2025
Program end date: February 2026
Questions
Please contact José Jackson-Malete at jacks184@msu.edu or +1 517-884-8587 with any questions.
Read more
By:
Justin Rabineau

WATER, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT
+2
Editor's Note: Richard Mkandawire, AAP Africa Director
Dear AAP Members, Stakeholders, Partners and the Public
I am pleased to present the second issue of AAP Connect, focusing on AAP’s strategic goal of research for impact. In this issue, we use the example of a critical theme that lies at the heart of sustainable agriculture and food security in Africa: soil health, fertilizer usage, and agri-food systems. Our inaugural AAP Connect issue published in April, focused on building sustainable networks in research. We wanted to highlight some of the unorthodox approaches to networking, not just the usual meet, and greet, and exchange contacts, but ones that take into account context and timing. If you missed it, please spare some time and browse through it.
We have just returned from Nairobi, Kenya, where African governments led by their heads of state, global donor organizations, and global policy network organizations met at the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit, 7th to 9th May 2024. At the summit, stakeholders unveiled Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan and shed light on the pressing need to invest in this plan’s implementation, emphasizing the crucial role of soil health and fertilizer in enhancing food security and nutrition across the continent. This AAP Connect issue, therefore, comes at a critical period where Africa has gone through a challenging period of fertilizer shortages, and governments and global agencies are poised to take action. This aligns perfectly with AAP’s priority area of Agri-food systems, emphasizing one of AAP’s primary Goal 3: Research for Impact, that targets deliver impactful research that transforms lives.
I am also proud to announce to you that witnessing the summit unfolding was a surreal moment for us at AAP because we have played a pivotal role in its conceptualization. It has taken much effort and a lot of back-and-forth negotiations to make it a reality. We are proud to be the technical partner of this important process that will see transformations in Africa’s agri-food systems. The icing on the cake was that we at AAP, in partnership with ANAPRI and top experts in agriculture and soil health from across our consortium, convened a side event that focused on the role of science, research, and training institutions in the realization of Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. During this side event, we discussed at length the critical importance of knowledge creation, training, and collaborative research initiatives in driving sustainable soil health and fertilizer practices to improve food baskets in Africa.
Further cementing our commitment to actionable outcomes, AAP collaborated with Catholic Relief Services and the Government of Malawi to host the Malawi Ready event. This event convened key stakeholders to chart a strategic implementation path for Malawi's adoption of the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. We were honored to welcome the President of Malawi, Dr Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera and other distinguished government officials, signifying the collective resolve to tackle soil health and fertilizer challenges head-on.
For this issue, as a way to spark your minds with innovative approaches to research for impact, we have enlisted top experts to unpack key issues and bring ideas that may be transformed into solutions for Africa. We hope that you will enjoy and be inspired to work on your next impactful research project in agri-food systems or any other field which has the potential to transform lives in Africa and beyond. Together, we can drive meaningful change and pave the way for a more sustainable and food-secure Africa.
Warm regards,
Richard Mkandawire
AAP Africa Office Director
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major
WATER, ENERGY, AND THE...
+2
Editor's Note: Richard Mkandawire, AAP Africa Director
Dear AAP Members, Stakeholders, Partners and the Public
I am pleased to present the second issue of AAP Connect, focusing on AAP’s strategic goal of research for impact. In this issue, we use the example of a critical theme that lies at the heart of sustainable agriculture and food security in Africa: soil health, fertilizer usage, and agri-food systems. Our inaugural AAP Connect issue published in April, focused on building sustainable networks in research. We wanted to highlight some of the unorthodox approaches to networking, not just the usual meet, and greet, and exchange contacts, but ones that take into account context and timing. If you missed it, please spare some time and browse through it.
We have just returned from Nairobi, Kenya, where African governments led by their heads of state, global donor organizations, and global policy network organizations met at the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit, 7th to 9th May 2024. At the summit, stakeholders unveiled Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan and shed light on the pressing need to invest in this plan’s implementation, emphasizing the crucial role of soil health and fertilizer in enhancing food security and nutrition across the continent. This AAP Connect issue, therefore, comes at a critical period where Africa has gone through a challenging period of fertilizer shortages, and governments and global agencies are poised to take action. This aligns perfectly with AAP’s priority area of Agri-food systems, emphasizing one of AAP’s primary Goal 3: Research for Impact, that targets deliver impactful research that transforms lives.
I am also proud to announce to you that witnessing the summit unfolding was a surreal moment for us at AAP because we have played a pivotal role in its conceptualization. It has taken much effort and a lot of back-and-forth negotiations to make it a reality. We are proud to be the technical partner of this important process that will see transformations in Africa’s agri-food systems. The icing on the cake was that we at AAP, in partnership with ANAPRI and top experts in agriculture and soil health from across our consortium, convened a side event that focused on the role of science, research, and training institutions in the realization of Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. During this side event, we discussed at length the critical importance of knowledge creation, training, and collaborative research initiatives in driving sustainable soil health and fertilizer practices to improve food baskets in Africa.
Further cementing our commitment to actionable outcomes, AAP collaborated with Catholic Relief Services and the Government of Malawi to host the Malawi Ready event. This event convened key stakeholders to chart a strategic implementation path for Malawi's adoption of the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. We were honored to welcome the President of Malawi, Dr Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera and other distinguished government officials, signifying the collective resolve to tackle soil health and fertilizer challenges head-on.
For this issue, as a way to spark your minds with innovative approaches to research for impact, we have enlisted top experts to unpack key issues and bring ideas that may be transformed into solutions for Africa. We hope that you will enjoy and be inspired to work on your next impactful research project in agri-food systems or any other field which has the potential to transform lives in Africa and beyond. Together, we can drive meaningful change and pave the way for a more sustainable and food-secure Africa.
Warm regards,
Richard Mkandawire
AAP Africa Office Director
Read more
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major
HEALTH AND NUTRITION
+2
The Role of Science, Institutions of Learning, and Training on Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health.
Summary: African soils are in danger, and this crisis threatens to disrupt food security and ecosystems, potentially leading to famine and nutritional challenges. Healthy soil is essential for human existence on earth. Healthy soils have biological, physical and chemical properties found in their top layer, or topsoil, that sustain plant and animal productivity, soil biodiversity and environmental quality.
Healthy topsoil is a key factor in bolstering agriculture productivity in Africa. Yet it is known that African soils are in a crisis. Addressing this urgent issue requires a collaborative effort involving policy and regulation, funding, private and community interventions, and, crucially, the leadership of African research and training institutions. These entities are pivotal in restoring Africa’s soil health and ensuring the appropriate use of fertilizers.
The Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit (AFSHS), held in Nairobi, sought to address these pressing issues. The Summit’s primary goal was to establish an Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan, a roadmap designed to tackle the challenges of declining soil health and low fertilizer efficacy across the continent. This plan, envisioned to guide efforts until 2030, aims to enhance agricultural productivity through sustainable practices and robust policy frameworks.
During the Summit, the Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), in collaboration with Michigan State University (MSU) and the Africa Network of Agricultural Policy Research Institutes (ANAPRI), organized a critical side event. This event underscored the indispensable role that African research and training institutions play in shaping and implementing policy reforms for fertilizer and soil health programs.
The Vital Role of African Research and Training Institutions
African research and training institutions are custodians of knowledge and expertise, uniquely positioned to drive sustainable agricultural practices and to address ongoing soil degradation. Their role in promoting sustainable practices and conducting extensive research is central to the success of the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. These institutions, including universities, scientific crop and livestock institutes, and policy research think tanks, are essential in providing thought leadership, policy engagement, and the development of key solutions and implementation strategies.
Professor Thom S. Jayne of MSU highlighted this during his keynote presentation at the side event. He emphasized that effective implementation of soil health initiatives requires the involvement of trusted local institutions. “The message coming from established local actors will generate much greater trust and commitment than the same message from externally funded outside interests,” he noted. This sentiment reflects a broader recognition that African-led initiatives are crucial for achieving lasting impact and engagement with African governments.
Challenges and Collaborative Efforts
Implementing these initiatives is not without challenges. African food systems face pressures from climate change, population growth, conflict, and land degradation. Innovation is necessary to adapt to these conditions, and this innovation must be driven by robust agricultural research and extension systems. As Thomas Jayne stated, “Innovation is required for African founding populations to survive and remain competitive and productive in the face of all these changes.”
However, the adoption of innovative soil fertility practices among smallholder farmers remains low. Many farmers struggle to consistently implement practices like crop rotations, intercropping legumes, and recycling organic matter. To address this according to Thom Jayne, there must be strong bi-directional learning systems where farmers benefit from new technologies, and scientists understand and address the barriers to adoption.
Path Forward: Empowering Local Institutions
The need for empowering local African institutions will be key to responding to the call implementation of the actions plans. However the local institutions will need to take into account challenges such as; the need for building national coalitions of stakeholders and defining local level coordination mechanisms as well as resources including human and financial These institutions must be supported to fulfill their mandates, drive research and innovation, and implement policies that reflect the realities and needs of African agriculture on the ground. Professor Titus Awokuse from MSU underscored the importance of these partnerships. “Stakeholders must collaborate and contribute to the success of the action plans, from providing leadership and coordination to investing resources and actively participating in the implementation process,” he said. This collaborative approach ensures that the action plans are not just theoretical but are translated into tangible outcomes that benefit farmers and communities across Africa.
Conclusion
The Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit and its associated events highlighted the critical need for a concerted effort to address soil health and fertilizer use in Africa. By leveraging the expertise and leadership of African research and training institutions, supported by a collaborative network of stakeholders, there is a real opportunity to create a more sustainable and productive agricultural future for the continent. The success of these initiatives will not only restore soil health but also enhance food security and resilience, ensuring a prosperous future for Africa and its people. Inherently, this is not a small feat, given the diverse multistakeholder partnerships, alongside the complex nature of various governments, it requires careful navigation. Titus Awokuse reminded everyone that “even though our conversations may take many forms and go in different directions, we need to always remember it's about the people. It's about families, children and individuals that don't have a voice, therefore in our conversations we need to think carefully on how to leverage our positions of privilege to make their voices heard”
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

HEALTH AND NUTRITION
+2
The Role of Science, Institutions of Learning, and Training on Africa’s Fertilizer and Soil Health.
Summary: African soils are in danger, and this crisis threatens to disrupt food security and ecosystems, potentially leading to famine and nutritional challenges. Healthy soil is essential for human existence on earth. Healthy soils have biological, physical and chemical properties found in their top layer, or topsoil, that sustain plant and animal productivity, soil biodiversity and environmental quality.
Healthy topsoil is a key factor in bolstering agriculture productivity in Africa. Yet it is known that African soils are in a crisis. Addressing this urgent issue requires a collaborative effort involving policy and regulation, funding, private and community interventions, and, crucially, the leadership of African research and training institutions. These entities are pivotal in restoring Africa’s soil health and ensuring the appropriate use of fertilizers.
The Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit (AFSHS), held in Nairobi, sought to address these pressing issues. The Summit’s primary goal was to establish an Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan, a roadmap designed to tackle the challenges of declining soil health and low fertilizer efficacy across the continent. This plan, envisioned to guide efforts until 2030, aims to enhance agricultural productivity through sustainable practices and robust policy frameworks.
During the Summit, the Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), in collaboration with Michigan State University (MSU) and the Africa Network of Agricultural Policy Research Institutes (ANAPRI), organized a critical side event. This event underscored the indispensable role that African research and training institutions play in shaping and implementing policy reforms for fertilizer and soil health programs.
The Vital Role of African Research and Training Institutions
African research and training institutions are custodians of knowledge and expertise, uniquely positioned to drive sustainable agricultural practices and to address ongoing soil degradation. Their role in promoting sustainable practices and conducting extensive research is central to the success of the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. These institutions, including universities, scientific crop and livestock institutes, and policy research think tanks, are essential in providing thought leadership, policy engagement, and the development of key solutions and implementation strategies.
Professor Thom S. Jayne of MSU highlighted this during his keynote presentation at the side event. He emphasized that effective implementation of soil health initiatives requires the involvement of trusted local institutions. “The message coming from established local actors will generate much greater trust and commitment than the same message from externally funded outside interests,” he noted. This sentiment reflects a broader recognition that African-led initiatives are crucial for achieving lasting impact and engagement with African governments.
Challenges and Collaborative Efforts
Implementing these initiatives is not without challenges. African food systems face pressures from climate change, population growth, conflict, and land degradation. Innovation is necessary to adapt to these conditions, and this innovation must be driven by robust agricultural research and extension systems. As Thomas Jayne stated, “Innovation is required for African founding populations to survive and remain competitive and productive in the face of all these changes.”
However, the adoption of innovative soil fertility practices among smallholder farmers remains low. Many farmers struggle to consistently implement practices like crop rotations, intercropping legumes, and recycling organic matter. To address this according to Thom Jayne, there must be strong bi-directional learning systems where farmers benefit from new technologies, and scientists understand and address the barriers to adoption.
Path Forward: Empowering Local Institutions
The need for empowering local African institutions will be key to responding to the call implementation of the actions plans. However the local institutions will need to take into account challenges such as; the need for building national coalitions of stakeholders and defining local level coordination mechanisms as well as resources including human and financial These institutions must be supported to fulfill their mandates, drive research and innovation, and implement policies that reflect the realities and needs of African agriculture on the ground. Professor Titus Awokuse from MSU underscored the importance of these partnerships. “Stakeholders must collaborate and contribute to the success of the action plans, from providing leadership and coordination to investing resources and actively participating in the implementation process,” he said. This collaborative approach ensures that the action plans are not just theoretical but are translated into tangible outcomes that benefit farmers and communities across Africa.
Conclusion
The Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit and its associated events highlighted the critical need for a concerted effort to address soil health and fertilizer use in Africa. By leveraging the expertise and leadership of African research and training institutions, supported by a collaborative network of stakeholders, there is a real opportunity to create a more sustainable and productive agricultural future for the continent. The success of these initiatives will not only restore soil health but also enhance food security and resilience, ensuring a prosperous future for Africa and its people. Inherently, this is not a small feat, given the diverse multistakeholder partnerships, alongside the complex nature of various governments, it requires careful navigation. Titus Awokuse reminded everyone that “even though our conversations may take many forms and go in different directions, we need to always remember it's about the people. It's about families, children and individuals that don't have a voice, therefore in our conversations we need to think carefully on how to leverage our positions of privilege to make their voices heard”
Read more
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

WATER, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT
+1
Malawi Ready: A Transformative Step Towards Soil Health and Agricultural Prosperity
The past month has been surreal for the Alliance for African Partnership (AAP). After years of meticulous planning, we finally witnessed the African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit in Nairobi. It's been a journey filled with challenges and triumphs. To top it off, we concluded the summit with a post-event organized by AAP, MWAPATA, and Malawian agricultural policy and development institutions under the theme "Malawi Ready."
This event served as a strong message of commitment and reinforcement by the Malawian Government to development partners, affirming that Malawi is fully prepared to implement the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. His Excellency, Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera, graced the occasion as the guest of honor for "Malawi Ready."
The Importance of Restoring Soils in Malawi
Malawi, like many other African countries, faces significant challenges related to soil degradation. Soil health is fundamental to agricultural productivity, which in turn is crucial for food security, economic development, and poverty alleviation. Restoring soil fertility in Malawi is not merely an environmental imperative but a socio-economic necessity. Fertile soils lead to better crop yields, improved nutrition, and increased incomes for farmers. This sets off a positive ripple effect throughout communities, enhancing overall well-being and fostering sustainable development.
Government Support and Donor Engagement
Recognizing the critical importance of soil health, the Government of Malawi has taken decisive steps to champion this cause. President Chakwera's presence and endorsement at the "Malawi Ready" event underscore the high level of political will and commitment to this initiative. In his address, President Chakwera emphasized the government's unwavering support for the action plan, highlighting the collaborative efforts required to achieve lasting impact.
The government's role extends beyond endorsement to active engagement with various stakeholders, including donor agencies, private sector partners, and local communities. This multi-faceted approach ensures that the action plan is comprehensive and inclusive, addressing the needs and challenges of all stakeholders involved.
Securing Commitments and Investments
"Malawi Ready" was pivotal in securing commitments and investments from major development partners such as USAID, AFAP, and Catholic Relief Services. These organizations bring financial resources, technical expertise and innovative solutions essential for the successful implementation of the action plan. Their involvement guarantees a robust support system that will drive the initiative forward, ensuring sustainability and scalability.
We are thrilled to have played a central role in driving this initiative forward, led by AAP Director of the Africa Office, Prof. Richard Mkandawire, who also steered the proceedings of "Malawi Ready." The event was marked by fruitful discussions, strategic planning, and a shared vision for a sustainable agricultural future in Malawi.
The Road Ahead
The launch of "Malawi Ready" marks the beginning of a new chapter in Malawi's agricultural development. The focus now shifts to the implementation phase, where the collective efforts of all stakeholders will be crucial. Continuous monitoring, evaluation, and adaptive management will ensure that the initiatives remain aligned with the set goals and objectives. The commitment demonstrated by the Malawian Government, along with the support from international partners, sets a strong foundation for success. Together, we aim to transform Malawi's agricultural landscape, restore soil health, and create a resilient and prosperous future for its people.
In conclusion, "Malawi Ready" is not just a campaign; it is a clarion call to action. It embodies the hope and determination of a nation ready to reclaim its soil health and agricultural productivity. As we move forward, let us remember that the journey to sustainable development is a collective one, and with unity and perseverance, we can achieve remarkable milestones for Malawi and beyond.
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

WATER, ENERGY, AND THE...
+1
Malawi Ready: A Transformative Step Towards Soil Health and Agricultural Prosperity
The past month has been surreal for the Alliance for African Partnership (AAP). After years of meticulous planning, we finally witnessed the African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit in Nairobi. It's been a journey filled with challenges and triumphs. To top it off, we concluded the summit with a post-event organized by AAP, MWAPATA, and Malawian agricultural policy and development institutions under the theme "Malawi Ready."
This event served as a strong message of commitment and reinforcement by the Malawian Government to development partners, affirming that Malawi is fully prepared to implement the Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health Action Plan. His Excellency, Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera, graced the occasion as the guest of honor for "Malawi Ready."
The Importance of Restoring Soils in Malawi
Malawi, like many other African countries, faces significant challenges related to soil degradation. Soil health is fundamental to agricultural productivity, which in turn is crucial for food security, economic development, and poverty alleviation. Restoring soil fertility in Malawi is not merely an environmental imperative but a socio-economic necessity. Fertile soils lead to better crop yields, improved nutrition, and increased incomes for farmers. This sets off a positive ripple effect throughout communities, enhancing overall well-being and fostering sustainable development.
Government Support and Donor Engagement
Recognizing the critical importance of soil health, the Government of Malawi has taken decisive steps to champion this cause. President Chakwera's presence and endorsement at the "Malawi Ready" event underscore the high level of political will and commitment to this initiative. In his address, President Chakwera emphasized the government's unwavering support for the action plan, highlighting the collaborative efforts required to achieve lasting impact.
The government's role extends beyond endorsement to active engagement with various stakeholders, including donor agencies, private sector partners, and local communities. This multi-faceted approach ensures that the action plan is comprehensive and inclusive, addressing the needs and challenges of all stakeholders involved.
Securing Commitments and Investments
"Malawi Ready" was pivotal in securing commitments and investments from major development partners such as USAID, AFAP, and Catholic Relief Services. These organizations bring financial resources, technical expertise and innovative solutions essential for the successful implementation of the action plan. Their involvement guarantees a robust support system that will drive the initiative forward, ensuring sustainability and scalability.
We are thrilled to have played a central role in driving this initiative forward, led by AAP Director of the Africa Office, Prof. Richard Mkandawire, who also steered the proceedings of "Malawi Ready." The event was marked by fruitful discussions, strategic planning, and a shared vision for a sustainable agricultural future in Malawi.
The Road Ahead
The launch of "Malawi Ready" marks the beginning of a new chapter in Malawi's agricultural development. The focus now shifts to the implementation phase, where the collective efforts of all stakeholders will be crucial. Continuous monitoring, evaluation, and adaptive management will ensure that the initiatives remain aligned with the set goals and objectives. The commitment demonstrated by the Malawian Government, along with the support from international partners, sets a strong foundation for success. Together, we aim to transform Malawi's agricultural landscape, restore soil health, and create a resilient and prosperous future for its people.
In conclusion, "Malawi Ready" is not just a campaign; it is a clarion call to action. It embodies the hope and determination of a nation ready to reclaim its soil health and agricultural productivity. As we move forward, let us remember that the journey to sustainable development is a collective one, and with unity and perseverance, we can achieve remarkable milestones for Malawi and beyond.
Read more
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+1
Nourishing the Future: Reflections on the Follow-up to the African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit
Summary: In the wake of Africa's escalating food security crisis, marked by chronic undernourishment and stunted growth in children, a transformative approach to fertilizer use and soil health is paramount. Despite past efforts like the Abuja Declaration, fertilizer usage in Africa remains critically low, contributing to poor crop yields and persistent hunger. The recent African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit has reignited hope with a comprehensive Action Plan aimed at integrating fertilizer use with sustainable soil health practices. This article delves into the necessity of deep and hyper-localization in policy and practice, advocating for tailored, evidence-based approaches to boost agricultural productivity. 12 is Professor in Michigan State University’s Department of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics (AFRE), Senior Co-Director of AFRE’s Food Security Group (FSG), and Director of the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Food Security Policy Research, Capacity, and Influence (PRCI) funded by USAID
A cursory glance at the latest data on “Africa’s food and nutrition” reveals a grim reality: hundreds of millions are undernourished. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), over 282 million Africans are chronically undernourished—a number exacerbated by the back-to-back effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, which have added tens of millions to this tally. The continent’s food security crisis is further underscored by the fact that over a billion people cannot afford a healthy diet, with children disproportionately affected; approximately 30% of African children are stunted due to malnutrition.
The fundamental driver of this crisis is the widespread poverty that makes so many unable to obtain the food they need, whether through their own production or through the market. Yet there is no question that the continent's inadequate food production capabilities, and the failure of these capacities to keep up with population growth, is a major contributor to the crisis. A significant factor in this inadequate and slowing growing production capacity is low use of fertilizers and the poor health of soils across Africa. Compared to other regions, African countries use minimal amounts of fertilizer, resulting in lower crop yields and perpetuating cycles of hunger and malnutrition.
In recognition of this fact, and under the auspices of the African Union, the African continent just held a successful African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit (AFSHS) in Nairobi. Featuring wide attendance of political and food systems leaders across the continent together with development partners, the Summit captured and fueled their commitment and enthusiasm to improve the lives of African farmers and consumers. A key contribution of the Summit was to harness this commitment to an Action Plan that provides a strong basis for addressing the continent’s longstanding agricultural productivity crisis. A major reason that Summit participants emerged optimistic of progress is the specificity of the continental Action Plan and its understanding that fertilizer, if it is to drive sustainable intensification, must be integrated into a broad package of reformed policies and programs focused on soil health.
Yet we have been here before. The Abuja Declaration on Fertilizer for the African Green Revolution, signed by 14 African heads of state and released during the African Fertilizer Summit of 2006, set lofty goals for increased fertilizer use and productivity growth on the continent. Yet results have been disappointing at best. On the one hand, fertilizer use per hectare (ha) of arable land has grown 79% since 2006, nearly double the growth rate of South Asia, comparable to the rate in Latin America and the Caribbean, and vastly higher than East Asia’s growth of only 8%. Yet this growth cannot be considered surprising since it started from an extremely low base; the result is that levels of fertilizer use in Sub-Saharan Africa today remain a small fraction of those in any other region of the world – 23 kg/ha compared to 207 kg/ha, 187 kg/ha, and 312 kg/ha, respectively, in Latin America and the Caribbean, South Asia, and East Asia (World Bank Databank). And use today is less than half the target of 50 kg/ha that the Abuja Declaration set for 2015. Regarding productivity, while cereal yields nearly doubled from 2006 to now, this growth is less than half that achieved in every other region of the developing world during this time. This means that African agricultural productivity has fallen even further behind the rest of the world since Abuja.
The message is clear – Africa needed a big push to do major catch-up growth in fertilizer use, soil management, and yields, and failed to achieve it. Partly as a result, after at least two decades of declining hunger and malnutrition, both have been on the rise on the continent in recent years.
What needs to be different this time?
A useful lesson in life and in work is that one should not expect different results while continuing to do what we’ve done in the past. This lesson can be hard to learn, especially for the large bureaucracies – governments, large bilateral and multilateral development partners, and even the international agricultural research community - that are central to generating a productive response to the 2024 AFSHS. So, what needs to change if we want, this time, to see the kind of transformational change that is needed in Africa’s agricultural production practices if the continent is to sustainably nourish its population and pull its people out of poverty?
This note suggests that obtaining different results this time – achieving sustained and effective action for improved fertilizer use and soil health - requires a much more profound localization of approach, and that this localization requires important changes in how governments, their development partners, and other stakeholders behave. Specifically, we argue for two different but complementary approaches: deep localization in the process of policy and programmatic design and in how research to support that process is conceived and carried out; and what some call hyper localization in technical recommendations for farmer practices on their fields. These two ideas – deep localization and hyper localization - need to be brought together to reinforce each other and jointly drive the design and implementation of a new and much more effective generation of policies and programs to achieve rapid and sustained growth in African agricultural productivity
The rest of this note explains what we mean by deep localization and hyper localization, why we believe that they need to go hand-in-hand in the follow-up to the AFSHS, and what they imply about how governments and development partners, including applied researchers in the global north and global south, need to change the attitudes and approach they bring to their work.
Hyper Localization
Hyper-localization is a popularized term that refers to the scientific concept of “4R” in soil nutrient management – right source, right rate, right time, and right place (Fixen, 2020; Reetz et al., 2015). The messages is that one needs to apply the right kind of nutrient in the right formulation and needs to apply it at the right rate and at the appropriate time, based on the specific field receiving the nutrient. Hyper-localization thus refers to the technical aspects of nutrient use and emphasizes customization to a farmer’s specific field. We offer four comments in this regard.
First, localized fertilizer recommendations are important across the world, since soil characteristics can vary quite a lot across countries, across regions in a country, across fields, and even within a field. The rapid rise of “precision agriculture” in industrialized countries, in which a digital soil map of a farmer’s field linked to GPS technology that varies the blend applied by the machinery to match the soil map, is a clear indicator of the importance of highly localized fertilizer use to farmer profitability.
Second, much more localized application may be especially important in Africa, since this continent seems to present substantially higher variability over space in soil characteristics than other regions of the world (Suri and Udry, 2022). Together with large variability over space in transport infrastructure, crop and fertilizer prices, and access to markets, this agroecological heterogeneity drives extremely large variation in returns to fertilizer (Suri, 2011).
Third, fertilizer policy in Africa has failed to come to terms with this heterogeneity through its decades-long “one-size-fits-all” approach. Too often, a sharply limited set of fertilizer formulations is provided nationally, often through government programs at subsidized prices. Given the heterogeneity just discussed, this is a recipe for poor profitability and low farmer adoption despite very high programmatic expenditures.
Fourth, implementing a 4R approach – enabling farmers to apply the fertilizer that their field needs, in the right amount and at the right time - requires that farmers have “access to knowledge, all needed fertilizers, and related services” (Reetz et al., 2015). In other words, farmers need to know what to apply, they need to be able to get it, and they need to be able to access knowledge and inputs for complementary practices such as improved seeds and organic practices crucial to sustainable use of chemical fertilizers. We see two key reasons why all but a tiny fraction of farmers in Africa do not have this kind of access. One is that, since at least the days of structural adjustment in the 1980s, African governments have dramatically under-invested in rural extension systems and in the soil testing and related agroecological profiling that would allow at least some evidence-based variation in fertilizer recommendations. New technologies promise to reduce the cost of generating improved and spatially disaggregated knowledge of soil characteristics, but these need to be linked to functioning research and extension systems to be put to use for African farmers.
The second key reason that farmers don’t have this kind of access relates to fertilizer and broader agricultural input policy in much of Africa. Private sector fertilizer distribution through markets in principle holds the prospect of providing farmers with greater choice in what they use, but national fertilizer policies frequently undermine these channels (Jayne et al., 2018). Heavy reliance on imported formulations exacerbates this problem, though this is beginning to change due to a large increase in domestic blending of fertilizers.
The bottom line is that moving towards more localized fertilizer recommendations and practice is crucial if Africa’s productivity crisis is to be reversed, and requires greater public investment in data and data systems linked to strengthened rural extension, together with policy and programmatic reform to facilitate a flexible private sector response to farmer input needs.
Deep Localization and “nth-best solutions”
A recurring problem in Africa and many developing countries is the promotion of “showpiece” legislation and programs that mimic what outside experts consider “best practice” but that are never implemented (Pritchett, Wilcock, and Andrews, 2013). Africa must avoid this in its follow-up to the AFSHS. Rather than passively following outside advice, African countries need to marshal their own capacities and use their own processes, as imperfect as they may be, to develop action plans that are put into action, are able to appropriately evolve over time, and are informed by strong, local empirical evidence.
This can happen only through a deeply localized process in which stakeholders are engaged in an iterative process of analysis, design, dialogue, negotiation and bargaining, and redesign. This process – indeed, development of workable policies and program in any country anywhere in the world – is an unavoidably messy social and political process. Empirical scientific input is crucial to good outcomes but is not and cannot be the main driver of what emerges. Indeed, the outcomes that emerge, based on iterative dialogue and political compromise, are typically far from what a researcher would consider “best”. We refer to them as “nth-best solutions”, meaning they are the best available solution given the technical, social, and political dynamics and constraints of the system one is operating in. Far from failure, the development and implementation of such nth-best solutions is a sign of progress in a country’s ability to develop its own approaches that are feasible, “effective enough”, and can be maintained and improved over time.
Attitudes and behavior need to change
We have argued that the follow-up at country level to the AFSHS must involve deep localization, that is, a determination by local stakeholders simultaneously to seek out the best technical advice while subjecting it to the messy bargaining and “deal making” inherent in any authentic design of workable policies and programs that countries can own and take responsibility for. We have further argued that this follow-up must come to terms with Africa’s huge heterogeneity in agroecology, infrastructure, and market access, and generate an approach that allows for hyper localized solutions. These solutions will be possible only through recommendations that are more suitable to farmers’ particular fields combined with greater access by farmers to the knowledge, inputs, and services needed to pursue these recommendations while adapting them based on their own knowledge. Achieving this will require simultaneously increasing public investment and reforming policies and programs to allow greater private sector response to farmer needs through functioning markets.
If African countries are able to do this, we believe they will generate policies and programs that, while far from what might be considered technically “best”, nonetheless stand a far greater chance of being implemented and adapted as needed, to impressive cumulative effect over time.
We suggest that attitudes and behavior by all parties will have to change to make this approach possible. African governments will need to show keener interest in locally generated empirical information even as they promote a highly stakeholder-engaged process of policy and programmatic design that may generate outcomes far from what many consider technically best. Local analysts need to understand and accept the fundamental social and political nature of this process while figuring out how to engage with that process and make their research understandable and relevant to decision makers. The international research community must commit to working in equitable partnerships that involve giving up the right to drive the research agenda. And donors need to recognize that things may take longer working this way and that countable and reportable outputs may be fewer but that outcomes – the changes that matter to people’s lives – should be greater.
Change is hard. Admitting that the way we as a global development community have approached empirically informed policy and programmatic change for many decades needs serious rethinking is especially hard. But by focusing on equitable partnerships and accepting what, on any reasonable reflection, is so obvious – that policies and programs simply must adapt to local political and social realities even while striving to be as effective and efficient and equitable as possible – this change is possible. We know how to proceed – let’s get on with it!
References
Liverpool-Tasie, LSO, B. Omonona, A. Sanou, W. Ogunleye, (2015). “Is Increasing Inorganic Fertilizer Use in Sub-Saharan Africa a Profitable Proposition? Evidence from Nigeria”. Food Policy, 67, 41-51. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2016.09.011.
Burke, W., T.S. Jayne, J.R. Black (2017). “Factors explaining the low and variable profitability of fertilizer application to maize in Zambia”. Agricultural Economics, 48(1), 115-126. https://doi.org/10.1111/agec.12299.
Laajaj, R., K. Macours, C. Masso, M. Thuita & B. Vanlauwe (2020). “Reconciling yield gains in agronomic trials with returns under African smallholder conditions”. Scientific Reports, 10, 14286. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-71155-y.
Jayne, T.S., NM Mason, WJ Burke, J Ariga (2018). “Taking stock of Africa's second-generation agricultural input subsidy programs”. Food Policy, 75: 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.01.003.
Fixen, P. (2020). “A brief account of the genesis of 4R nutrient stewardship.” Agronomy Journal, 112: 4511-4518. https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20315.
Reetz, H., P. Heffer and T. Bruulsema (2015). “4R nutrient stewardship: A global framework for sustainable fertilizer management”, Chapter 4 in Dreschel et al., eds, “Managing Water and Fertilizer for Sustainable Agricultural Intensification”, International Fertilizer Industry Association (IFA), International Water Management Institute (IWMI), International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI), and International Potash Institute (IPI). Paris, France, January 2015. ISBN 979-10-92366-02-0.
Pritchett, L., Woolcock, M., & Andrews, M. (2012). “Looking Like a State: Techniques of Persistent Failure in State Capability for Implementation”. The Journal of Development Studies, 49(1), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2012.709614.
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+1
Nourishing the Future: Reflections on the Follow-up to the African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit
Summary: In the wake of Africa's escalating food security crisis, marked by chronic undernourishment and stunted growth in children, a transformative approach to fertilizer use and soil health is paramount. Despite past efforts like the Abuja Declaration, fertilizer usage in Africa remains critically low, contributing to poor crop yields and persistent hunger. The recent African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit has reignited hope with a comprehensive Action Plan aimed at integrating fertilizer use with sustainable soil health practices. This article delves into the necessity of deep and hyper-localization in policy and practice, advocating for tailored, evidence-based approaches to boost agricultural productivity. 12 is Professor in Michigan State University’s Department of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics (AFRE), Senior Co-Director of AFRE’s Food Security Group (FSG), and Director of the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Food Security Policy Research, Capacity, and Influence (PRCI) funded by USAID
A cursory glance at the latest data on “Africa’s food and nutrition” reveals a grim reality: hundreds of millions are undernourished. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), over 282 million Africans are chronically undernourished—a number exacerbated by the back-to-back effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, which have added tens of millions to this tally. The continent’s food security crisis is further underscored by the fact that over a billion people cannot afford a healthy diet, with children disproportionately affected; approximately 30% of African children are stunted due to malnutrition.
The fundamental driver of this crisis is the widespread poverty that makes so many unable to obtain the food they need, whether through their own production or through the market. Yet there is no question that the continent's inadequate food production capabilities, and the failure of these capacities to keep up with population growth, is a major contributor to the crisis. A significant factor in this inadequate and slowing growing production capacity is low use of fertilizers and the poor health of soils across Africa. Compared to other regions, African countries use minimal amounts of fertilizer, resulting in lower crop yields and perpetuating cycles of hunger and malnutrition.
In recognition of this fact, and under the auspices of the African Union, the African continent just held a successful African Fertilizer and Soil Health Summit (AFSHS) in Nairobi. Featuring wide attendance of political and food systems leaders across the continent together with development partners, the Summit captured and fueled their commitment and enthusiasm to improve the lives of African farmers and consumers. A key contribution of the Summit was to harness this commitment to an Action Plan that provides a strong basis for addressing the continent’s longstanding agricultural productivity crisis. A major reason that Summit participants emerged optimistic of progress is the specificity of the continental Action Plan and its understanding that fertilizer, if it is to drive sustainable intensification, must be integrated into a broad package of reformed policies and programs focused on soil health.
Yet we have been here before. The Abuja Declaration on Fertilizer for the African Green Revolution, signed by 14 African heads of state and released during the African Fertilizer Summit of 2006, set lofty goals for increased fertilizer use and productivity growth on the continent. Yet results have been disappointing at best. On the one hand, fertilizer use per hectare (ha) of arable land has grown 79% since 2006, nearly double the growth rate of South Asia, comparable to the rate in Latin America and the Caribbean, and vastly higher than East Asia’s growth of only 8%. Yet this growth cannot be considered surprising since it started from an extremely low base; the result is that levels of fertilizer use in Sub-Saharan Africa today remain a small fraction of those in any other region of the world – 23 kg/ha compared to 207 kg/ha, 187 kg/ha, and 312 kg/ha, respectively, in Latin America and the Caribbean, South Asia, and East Asia (World Bank Databank). And use today is less than half the target of 50 kg/ha that the Abuja Declaration set for 2015. Regarding productivity, while cereal yields nearly doubled from 2006 to now, this growth is less than half that achieved in every other region of the developing world during this time. This means that African agricultural productivity has fallen even further behind the rest of the world since Abuja.
The message is clear – Africa needed a big push to do major catch-up growth in fertilizer use, soil management, and yields, and failed to achieve it. Partly as a result, after at least two decades of declining hunger and malnutrition, both have been on the rise on the continent in recent years.
What needs to be different this time?
A useful lesson in life and in work is that one should not expect different results while continuing to do what we’ve done in the past. This lesson can be hard to learn, especially for the large bureaucracies – governments, large bilateral and multilateral development partners, and even the international agricultural research community - that are central to generating a productive response to the 2024 AFSHS. So, what needs to change if we want, this time, to see the kind of transformational change that is needed in Africa’s agricultural production practices if the continent is to sustainably nourish its population and pull its people out of poverty?
This note suggests that obtaining different results this time – achieving sustained and effective action for improved fertilizer use and soil health - requires a much more profound localization of approach, and that this localization requires important changes in how governments, their development partners, and other stakeholders behave. Specifically, we argue for two different but complementary approaches: deep localization in the process of policy and programmatic design and in how research to support that process is conceived and carried out; and what some call hyper localization in technical recommendations for farmer practices on their fields. These two ideas – deep localization and hyper localization - need to be brought together to reinforce each other and jointly drive the design and implementation of a new and much more effective generation of policies and programs to achieve rapid and sustained growth in African agricultural productivity
The rest of this note explains what we mean by deep localization and hyper localization, why we believe that they need to go hand-in-hand in the follow-up to the AFSHS, and what they imply about how governments and development partners, including applied researchers in the global north and global south, need to change the attitudes and approach they bring to their work.
Hyper Localization
Hyper-localization is a popularized term that refers to the scientific concept of “4R” in soil nutrient management – right source, right rate, right time, and right place (Fixen, 2020; Reetz et al., 2015). The messages is that one needs to apply the right kind of nutrient in the right formulation and needs to apply it at the right rate and at the appropriate time, based on the specific field receiving the nutrient. Hyper-localization thus refers to the technical aspects of nutrient use and emphasizes customization to a farmer’s specific field. We offer four comments in this regard.
First, localized fertilizer recommendations are important across the world, since soil characteristics can vary quite a lot across countries, across regions in a country, across fields, and even within a field. The rapid rise of “precision agriculture” in industrialized countries, in which a digital soil map of a farmer’s field linked to GPS technology that varies the blend applied by the machinery to match the soil map, is a clear indicator of the importance of highly localized fertilizer use to farmer profitability.
Second, much more localized application may be especially important in Africa, since this continent seems to present substantially higher variability over space in soil characteristics than other regions of the world (Suri and Udry, 2022). Together with large variability over space in transport infrastructure, crop and fertilizer prices, and access to markets, this agroecological heterogeneity drives extremely large variation in returns to fertilizer (Suri, 2011).
Third, fertilizer policy in Africa has failed to come to terms with this heterogeneity through its decades-long “one-size-fits-all” approach. Too often, a sharply limited set of fertilizer formulations is provided nationally, often through government programs at subsidized prices. Given the heterogeneity just discussed, this is a recipe for poor profitability and low farmer adoption despite very high programmatic expenditures.
Fourth, implementing a 4R approach – enabling farmers to apply the fertilizer that their field needs, in the right amount and at the right time - requires that farmers have “access to knowledge, all needed fertilizers, and related services” (Reetz et al., 2015). In other words, farmers need to know what to apply, they need to be able to get it, and they need to be able to access knowledge and inputs for complementary practices such as improved seeds and organic practices crucial to sustainable use of chemical fertilizers. We see two key reasons why all but a tiny fraction of farmers in Africa do not have this kind of access. One is that, since at least the days of structural adjustment in the 1980s, African governments have dramatically under-invested in rural extension systems and in the soil testing and related agroecological profiling that would allow at least some evidence-based variation in fertilizer recommendations. New technologies promise to reduce the cost of generating improved and spatially disaggregated knowledge of soil characteristics, but these need to be linked to functioning research and extension systems to be put to use for African farmers.
The second key reason that farmers don’t have this kind of access relates to fertilizer and broader agricultural input policy in much of Africa. Private sector fertilizer distribution through markets in principle holds the prospect of providing farmers with greater choice in what they use, but national fertilizer policies frequently undermine these channels (Jayne et al., 2018). Heavy reliance on imported formulations exacerbates this problem, though this is beginning to change due to a large increase in domestic blending of fertilizers.
The bottom line is that moving towards more localized fertilizer recommendations and practice is crucial if Africa’s productivity crisis is to be reversed, and requires greater public investment in data and data systems linked to strengthened rural extension, together with policy and programmatic reform to facilitate a flexible private sector response to farmer input needs.
Deep Localization and “nth-best solutions”
A recurring problem in Africa and many developing countries is the promotion of “showpiece” legislation and programs that mimic what outside experts consider “best practice” but that are never implemented (Pritchett, Wilcock, and Andrews, 2013). Africa must avoid this in its follow-up to the AFSHS. Rather than passively following outside advice, African countries need to marshal their own capacities and use their own processes, as imperfect as they may be, to develop action plans that are put into action, are able to appropriately evolve over time, and are informed by strong, local empirical evidence.
This can happen only through a deeply localized process in which stakeholders are engaged in an iterative process of analysis, design, dialogue, negotiation and bargaining, and redesign. This process – indeed, development of workable policies and program in any country anywhere in the world – is an unavoidably messy social and political process. Empirical scientific input is crucial to good outcomes but is not and cannot be the main driver of what emerges. Indeed, the outcomes that emerge, based on iterative dialogue and political compromise, are typically far from what a researcher would consider “best”. We refer to them as “nth-best solutions”, meaning they are the best available solution given the technical, social, and political dynamics and constraints of the system one is operating in. Far from failure, the development and implementation of such nth-best solutions is a sign of progress in a country’s ability to develop its own approaches that are feasible, “effective enough”, and can be maintained and improved over time.
Attitudes and behavior need to change
We have argued that the follow-up at country level to the AFSHS must involve deep localization, that is, a determination by local stakeholders simultaneously to seek out the best technical advice while subjecting it to the messy bargaining and “deal making” inherent in any authentic design of workable policies and programs that countries can own and take responsibility for. We have further argued that this follow-up must come to terms with Africa’s huge heterogeneity in agroecology, infrastructure, and market access, and generate an approach that allows for hyper localized solutions. These solutions will be possible only through recommendations that are more suitable to farmers’ particular fields combined with greater access by farmers to the knowledge, inputs, and services needed to pursue these recommendations while adapting them based on their own knowledge. Achieving this will require simultaneously increasing public investment and reforming policies and programs to allow greater private sector response to farmer needs through functioning markets.
If African countries are able to do this, we believe they will generate policies and programs that, while far from what might be considered technically “best”, nonetheless stand a far greater chance of being implemented and adapted as needed, to impressive cumulative effect over time.
We suggest that attitudes and behavior by all parties will have to change to make this approach possible. African governments will need to show keener interest in locally generated empirical information even as they promote a highly stakeholder-engaged process of policy and programmatic design that may generate outcomes far from what many consider technically best. Local analysts need to understand and accept the fundamental social and political nature of this process while figuring out how to engage with that process and make their research understandable and relevant to decision makers. The international research community must commit to working in equitable partnerships that involve giving up the right to drive the research agenda. And donors need to recognize that things may take longer working this way and that countable and reportable outputs may be fewer but that outcomes – the changes that matter to people’s lives – should be greater.
Change is hard. Admitting that the way we as a global development community have approached empirically informed policy and programmatic change for many decades needs serious rethinking is especially hard. But by focusing on equitable partnerships and accepting what, on any reasonable reflection, is so obvious – that policies and programs simply must adapt to local political and social realities even while striving to be as effective and efficient and equitable as possible – this change is possible. We know how to proceed – let’s get on with it!
References
Liverpool-Tasie, LSO, B. Omonona, A. Sanou, W. Ogunleye, (2015). “Is Increasing Inorganic Fertilizer Use in Sub-Saharan Africa a Profitable Proposition? Evidence from Nigeria”. Food Policy, 67, 41-51. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2016.09.011.
Burke, W., T.S. Jayne, J.R. Black (2017). “Factors explaining the low and variable profitability of fertilizer application to maize in Zambia”. Agricultural Economics, 48(1), 115-126. https://doi.org/10.1111/agec.12299.
Laajaj, R., K. Macours, C. Masso, M. Thuita & B. Vanlauwe (2020). “Reconciling yield gains in agronomic trials with returns under African smallholder conditions”. Scientific Reports, 10, 14286. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-71155-y.
Jayne, T.S., NM Mason, WJ Burke, J Ariga (2018). “Taking stock of Africa's second-generation agricultural input subsidy programs”. Food Policy, 75: 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.01.003.
Fixen, P. (2020). “A brief account of the genesis of 4R nutrient stewardship.” Agronomy Journal, 112: 4511-4518. https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20315.
Reetz, H., P. Heffer and T. Bruulsema (2015). “4R nutrient stewardship: A global framework for sustainable fertilizer management”, Chapter 4 in Dreschel et al., eds, “Managing Water and Fertilizer for Sustainable Agricultural Intensification”, International Fertilizer Industry Association (IFA), International Water Management Institute (IWMI), International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI), and International Potash Institute (IPI). Paris, France, January 2015. ISBN 979-10-92366-02-0.
Pritchett, L., Woolcock, M., & Andrews, M. (2012). “Looking Like a State: Techniques of Persistent Failure in State Capability for Implementation”. The Journal of Development Studies, 49(1), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2012.709614.
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By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+3
Good afternoon all. I am writing to you from Mattu University, Ethiopia. Mattu University is seeking Institutions to collaborate with.
By:
Habtamu Amessa
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+3
Good afternoon all. I am writing to you from Mattu University, Ethiopia. Mattu University is seeking Institutions to collaborate with.
By:
Habtamu Amessa
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+3
Hello everyone, I am excited to join this group of great and promising scholars.
By:
AJIBO Chinenye Augustine
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+3
Hello everyone, I am excited to join this group of great and promising scholars.
By:
AJIBO Chinenye Augustine
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+6
Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa (PIRA) Strategic Funding
Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa
2024 Call for ProposalsInfo session and Q&A slides
The Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), a consortium of ten leading African universities, a distinguished research network for African research institute, and Michigan State University, is inviting proposals for its Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa (PIRA) strategic funding program. As a consortium-wide initiative, PIRA is a tiered funding opportunity designed to cultivate and support multidirectional, collaborative research partnerships at any stage of their development, whether they are initiatives to explore and create new relationships or scale existing ones. One of the unique aspects to these grants is the expectation that organizations will establish and develop fair and equitable partnerships from conception to closeout of the project, involving local stakeholders throughout the project, respecting their knowledge and expertise, and taking an adaptive approach that is responsive to the local context. Proposals should outline processes to establish such partnerships. Fair and equitable partnerships must also be established among members of the consortium if multiple organizations are working on the implementation of the project. Proposed partnership activities may entail cooperative research, capacity building initiatives, outreach and/or other activities that align with AAP’s pillars of building bridges, transforming institutions, and transforming lives. Proposals must address at least one of AAP’s priority areas: agri-food systems; water, energy and environment; culture and society; youth empowerment; education; health and nutrition; and, science, technology, and innovation.
Proposals are encouraged from diverse disciplinary perspectives. Submitted proposals must include principal investigators from both MSU and at least one African AAP member university. The project implementation timeframe will be 18 months.
FUNDING TIERS
The tiered funding structure is designed to support partnerships at different stages of maturity to create and strengthen relationships among institutions and act as a catalyst for research teams in securing external funding that will allow for long-term engagement. Applicants should submit proposals for the funding tier that best fits the level of engagement established among the PIs on the research team. However, AAP management reserves the right to relegate proposals to a different tier if deemed more appropriate during review. To ensure broad impact, more awards will be given at the planning grant level than the scaling grant level. Proposed activities for each tier may include, but are not limited to:
Planning Grants (up to $50,000), inception and early-stage partnership research activities, travel support for co-developing joint proposals (in accordance with all MSU travel guidelines), short-term capacity building trainings, network development, research symposia, or other activities that align with AAP’s priority themes and strategic objectives.
Scaling Grants (up to $100,000), continuation of ongoing partnerships that have the potential to significantly scale their research, capacity building, or outreach activities, broader institutional linkages, or other activities that align with AAP’s priority themes and strategic objectives.
ELIGIBILITY
The lead investigators for proposals must come from MSU and AAP African member universities. Proposals may also include partners from other institutions globally. Teams are encouraged to include partners from the private sector, governments, civil society organizations, and pan-African/global institutions.
Individuals who were PIs or co-PIs on grants from the previous round of PIRA grants or AAP’s strategic partnership grants are not eligible to lead proposals under this call but may participate as team members.
MSU ISP staff are not eligible to lead proposals.
GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS
All submissions must have a cover sheet and proposal narrative that includes the information listed below, a budget and budget narrative using the provided template, and letters of support. Please submit all application material via the application portal by Wednesday, August 14 at 11:59 PM EST.
Application with the project's title as well as names, institutional affiliations, titles of all principal investigators, and a brief (about 100 words) project summary
A proposal narrative, not to exceed 5,000 words with one appendix for references cited, that includes:
A description of the partnership, containing:
Capacity statements from each partner institution that outlines their respective strengths in relation to their proposed roles and responsibilities in the partnership
A brief description of the past or ongoing partnership, if applicable
The rationale for partnership and evidence that it will create or cultivate equitable, sustainable, and mutually beneficial partnerships
A problem statement that identifies the shared challenges to be addressed by the program activities, the theory of change, their relevance to AAP’s themes and pillars
Clearly defined objectives of the proposed partnership
A description of program activities as well as a logical framework that connects the proposed activities with their intended outputs, outcomes, and programmatic objectives
A timeline of activities
A monitoring, evaluating, and learning plan that outlines proposed indicators and collection methods
Identification of potential sources of additional funding that the partnership will pursue during the program’s period of performance
A line-item budget and budget narrative using the template provided. Templates and more information on budgetary considerations are below in BUDGET. A letter of support from each partner’s department, institution, or organization; and A CV or resume of each principal investigator (1-page max).
A letter of support for each PI from their dean or head of department that signifies buy-in from each partner at the institutional level. Please use the provided template
SELECTION CRITERIA
Program goals should align with at least one of AAP’s pillars:
Building bridges: Bringing people and organizations together to work toward common goals. Illustrative activities under this objective include: sponsoring thematic symposia or workshops that bring people together across sectors and disciplines or travel for preparation of proposals for larger grant applications. This also includes network development, communications among research groups or networks (e.g. digital innovations and digital forums), dissemination of knowledge through online journals and/or sharing of best practices among partners
Transforming institutions: Promoting sustainable and effective partnerships among institutions, enhancing resources, and increasing institutional capacity. Illustrative activities under this objective include: institutional capacity development at universities, NGOs, or in the public sector such as building financial management capacity, improving teaching and learning at universities, and/or increasing proposal development skills, among others.
Transforming lives: Supporting research with real-world impact that improves African lives and livelihoods. Illustrative activities under this objective include: putting research into action through evidence-based outreach and engagement, conducting early-stage research that has obvious potential to impact lives and livelihoods, improving dissemination of research outputs to practitioners and policy-makers, and/or designing innovative research-into-practice methodologies.
Submitted proposals will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
Evidence of a collaborative and equitable partnership that strengthens personal, professional, and/or institutional networks in a mutually beneficial and sustainable way. Other AAP principles that need to be demonstrated in the proposal and later in the implementation are mutual trust and respect, sustainability, innovativeness, co-creation, accountability, transparency, flexibility as well as multi-disciplinarity and trans-disciplinarity.
Alignment of proposed activities and program goal(s) to AAP’s 3 strategic objectives and 7 priority areas.
Potential for program deliverables to significantly contribute to their respective academic, technical, or technological fields.
Potential to create innovative models of community engagement and development that positively impact people’s lives.
Potential for principal investigators to attract and or leverage additional external funding to sustain program’s impact.
A thorough monitoring, evaluating, and learning plan that links program activities to their intended outputs and outcomes and includes a clear description of the MEL tools that will be used, what indicators will be measured, and a timeline for evaluation and reporting.
Gender equality, equity and inclusion are core values of AAP and are thus central to this call. All projects funded must demonstrate how they follow principles of gender and inclusion and should explain how applicants will integrate gender, equity, and inclusion issues in all stages of the project, including rationale, design, intended results, data collection, analysis, interpretation, and knowledge mobilization processes.
BUDGET
PIRA BUDGET TEMPLATE [.XLSX]
Using the template provided, applicants must submit a line-item budget and budget narrative for the life of the program that details each institution’s requested budget as well as an overall budget summary. Suggested line items are provided as guidelines but are not comprehensive or required. Proposed budgets should be co-created by the partnership teams and reflect an equitable distribution of funds, with each institution completing a separate tab within the budget template to show the anticipated disbursement of resources and cost sharing broken down by yearly expenditures. The budget narrative should clearly explain how the line items are calculated and for what purpose they will be used in achieving the program’s objectives. Please note that the MSU PI and their home department will be responsible for the financial administration of the award. As such, it is required that the MSU PI involve their department’s fiscal officer in the development of the proposed budget to ensure all financial guidelines and reporting requirements are met. Please submit budgets as an Excel file or similar formatted version that allows the reviewers to view the formulas used in the calculations.
Communications and Engagement10% of the total requested funds must be earmarked for communication and engagement efforts. For example, if a team is requesting a scaling grant for $100,000, at least $10,000 of that must be budgeted for communication and engagement efforts, such as developing creative projects that translate the research, engagement workshops and developing and utilizing dissemination tools such as video production, creation of digital resources, community engagement activities, etc.
Cost Share
10% of the total requested funds must be matched with contributions (monetary and/or in-kind) from all partners. The Co-PIs’ colleges, faculties. and/or departments will be expected to contribute to the costs of the proposed activities to ensure that the commitment to long-term partnering is shared by these units.
Ineligible Expenses
While funding may be used for a variety of activities, the following expenses are not eligible to be covered with the PIRA grants:
Regular salary of MSU faculty (summer salary is allowable)
Indirect costs (IDC)
Equipment exceeding $5,000
Construction-related costs
Total project salary & fringe cannot exceed 30% of total combined project budget.
SELECTION PROCESS
Proposals will initially be reviewed by the AAP management team according to the guidelines and criteria above. Short-listed applications will be assessed by external peer reviewers for quality of technical content. Final selections will be made by the AAP management team in consultation with its internal partners and consortium members.
SUBMISSION AND AWARD TIMELINE
APPLICATION PORTAL
Full proposal packages are due on Wednesday, August 14 at 11:59 PM EST and awards will be announced by early October. AAP management will work with awardees to finalize the plan and budget by November 20, 2024. Programs may begin according to their timeline but not before a final work plan and budget has been approved by AAP management. Programs must begin no later than January 22, 2025 and all program activities must be completed within 18 months of the start date. Progress will be due to AAP management at regular intervals throughout implementation. In addition, AAP will be conducting intermittent surveys of the awardees to evaluate the PIRA grant-making process and how successfully it embodies the AAP’s values of equity, transparency, and accountability.
By:
Justin Rabineau

AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+6
Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa (PIRA) Strategic Funding
Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa
2024 Call for ProposalsInfo session and Q&A slides
The Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), a consortium of ten leading African universities, a distinguished research network for African research institute, and Michigan State University, is inviting proposals for its Partnerships for Innovative Research in Africa (PIRA) strategic funding program. As a consortium-wide initiative, PIRA is a tiered funding opportunity designed to cultivate and support multidirectional, collaborative research partnerships at any stage of their development, whether they are initiatives to explore and create new relationships or scale existing ones. One of the unique aspects to these grants is the expectation that organizations will establish and develop fair and equitable partnerships from conception to closeout of the project, involving local stakeholders throughout the project, respecting their knowledge and expertise, and taking an adaptive approach that is responsive to the local context. Proposals should outline processes to establish such partnerships. Fair and equitable partnerships must also be established among members of the consortium if multiple organizations are working on the implementation of the project. Proposed partnership activities may entail cooperative research, capacity building initiatives, outreach and/or other activities that align with AAP’s pillars of building bridges, transforming institutions, and transforming lives. Proposals must address at least one of AAP’s priority areas: agri-food systems; water, energy and environment; culture and society; youth empowerment; education; health and nutrition; and, science, technology, and innovation.
Proposals are encouraged from diverse disciplinary perspectives. Submitted proposals must include principal investigators from both MSU and at least one African AAP member university. The project implementation timeframe will be 18 months.
FUNDING TIERS
The tiered funding structure is designed to support partnerships at different stages of maturity to create and strengthen relationships among institutions and act as a catalyst for research teams in securing external funding that will allow for long-term engagement. Applicants should submit proposals for the funding tier that best fits the level of engagement established among the PIs on the research team. However, AAP management reserves the right to relegate proposals to a different tier if deemed more appropriate during review. To ensure broad impact, more awards will be given at the planning grant level than the scaling grant level. Proposed activities for each tier may include, but are not limited to:
Planning Grants (up to $50,000), inception and early-stage partnership research activities, travel support for co-developing joint proposals (in accordance with all MSU travel guidelines), short-term capacity building trainings, network development, research symposia, or other activities that align with AAP’s priority themes and strategic objectives.
Scaling Grants (up to $100,000), continuation of ongoing partnerships that have the potential to significantly scale their research, capacity building, or outreach activities, broader institutional linkages, or other activities that align with AAP’s priority themes and strategic objectives.
ELIGIBILITY
The lead investigators for proposals must come from MSU and AAP African member universities. Proposals may also include partners from other institutions globally. Teams are encouraged to include partners from the private sector, governments, civil society organizations, and pan-African/global institutions.
Individuals who were PIs or co-PIs on grants from the previous round of PIRA grants or AAP’s strategic partnership grants are not eligible to lead proposals under this call but may participate as team members.
MSU ISP staff are not eligible to lead proposals.
GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS
All submissions must have a cover sheet and proposal narrative that includes the information listed below, a budget and budget narrative using the provided template, and letters of support. Please submit all application material via the application portal by Wednesday, August 14 at 11:59 PM EST.
Application with the project's title as well as names, institutional affiliations, titles of all principal investigators, and a brief (about 100 words) project summary
A proposal narrative, not to exceed 5,000 words with one appendix for references cited, that includes:
A description of the partnership, containing:
Capacity statements from each partner institution that outlines their respective strengths in relation to their proposed roles and responsibilities in the partnership
A brief description of the past or ongoing partnership, if applicable
The rationale for partnership and evidence that it will create or cultivate equitable, sustainable, and mutually beneficial partnerships
A problem statement that identifies the shared challenges to be addressed by the program activities, the theory of change, their relevance to AAP’s themes and pillars
Clearly defined objectives of the proposed partnership
A description of program activities as well as a logical framework that connects the proposed activities with their intended outputs, outcomes, and programmatic objectives
A timeline of activities
A monitoring, evaluating, and learning plan that outlines proposed indicators and collection methods
Identification of potential sources of additional funding that the partnership will pursue during the program’s period of performance
A line-item budget and budget narrative using the template provided. Templates and more information on budgetary considerations are below in BUDGET. A letter of support from each partner’s department, institution, or organization; and A CV or resume of each principal investigator (1-page max).
A letter of support for each PI from their dean or head of department that signifies buy-in from each partner at the institutional level. Please use the provided template
SELECTION CRITERIA
Program goals should align with at least one of AAP’s pillars:
Building bridges: Bringing people and organizations together to work toward common goals. Illustrative activities under this objective include: sponsoring thematic symposia or workshops that bring people together across sectors and disciplines or travel for preparation of proposals for larger grant applications. This also includes network development, communications among research groups or networks (e.g. digital innovations and digital forums), dissemination of knowledge through online journals and/or sharing of best practices among partners
Transforming institutions: Promoting sustainable and effective partnerships among institutions, enhancing resources, and increasing institutional capacity. Illustrative activities under this objective include: institutional capacity development at universities, NGOs, or in the public sector such as building financial management capacity, improving teaching and learning at universities, and/or increasing proposal development skills, among others.
Transforming lives: Supporting research with real-world impact that improves African lives and livelihoods. Illustrative activities under this objective include: putting research into action through evidence-based outreach and engagement, conducting early-stage research that has obvious potential to impact lives and livelihoods, improving dissemination of research outputs to practitioners and policy-makers, and/or designing innovative research-into-practice methodologies.
Submitted proposals will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
Evidence of a collaborative and equitable partnership that strengthens personal, professional, and/or institutional networks in a mutually beneficial and sustainable way. Other AAP principles that need to be demonstrated in the proposal and later in the implementation are mutual trust and respect, sustainability, innovativeness, co-creation, accountability, transparency, flexibility as well as multi-disciplinarity and trans-disciplinarity.
Alignment of proposed activities and program goal(s) to AAP’s 3 strategic objectives and 7 priority areas.
Potential for program deliverables to significantly contribute to their respective academic, technical, or technological fields.
Potential to create innovative models of community engagement and development that positively impact people’s lives.
Potential for principal investigators to attract and or leverage additional external funding to sustain program’s impact.
A thorough monitoring, evaluating, and learning plan that links program activities to their intended outputs and outcomes and includes a clear description of the MEL tools that will be used, what indicators will be measured, and a timeline for evaluation and reporting.
Gender equality, equity and inclusion are core values of AAP and are thus central to this call. All projects funded must demonstrate how they follow principles of gender and inclusion and should explain how applicants will integrate gender, equity, and inclusion issues in all stages of the project, including rationale, design, intended results, data collection, analysis, interpretation, and knowledge mobilization processes.
BUDGET
PIRA BUDGET TEMPLATE [.XLSX]
Using the template provided, applicants must submit a line-item budget and budget narrative for the life of the program that details each institution’s requested budget as well as an overall budget summary. Suggested line items are provided as guidelines but are not comprehensive or required. Proposed budgets should be co-created by the partnership teams and reflect an equitable distribution of funds, with each institution completing a separate tab within the budget template to show the anticipated disbursement of resources and cost sharing broken down by yearly expenditures. The budget narrative should clearly explain how the line items are calculated and for what purpose they will be used in achieving the program’s objectives. Please note that the MSU PI and their home department will be responsible for the financial administration of the award. As such, it is required that the MSU PI involve their department’s fiscal officer in the development of the proposed budget to ensure all financial guidelines and reporting requirements are met. Please submit budgets as an Excel file or similar formatted version that allows the reviewers to view the formulas used in the calculations.
Communications and Engagement10% of the total requested funds must be earmarked for communication and engagement efforts. For example, if a team is requesting a scaling grant for $100,000, at least $10,000 of that must be budgeted for communication and engagement efforts, such as developing creative projects that translate the research, engagement workshops and developing and utilizing dissemination tools such as video production, creation of digital resources, community engagement activities, etc.
Cost Share
10% of the total requested funds must be matched with contributions (monetary and/or in-kind) from all partners. The Co-PIs’ colleges, faculties. and/or departments will be expected to contribute to the costs of the proposed activities to ensure that the commitment to long-term partnering is shared by these units.
Ineligible Expenses
While funding may be used for a variety of activities, the following expenses are not eligible to be covered with the PIRA grants:
Regular salary of MSU faculty (summer salary is allowable)
Indirect costs (IDC)
Equipment exceeding $5,000
Construction-related costs
Total project salary & fringe cannot exceed 30% of total combined project budget.
SELECTION PROCESS
Proposals will initially be reviewed by the AAP management team according to the guidelines and criteria above. Short-listed applications will be assessed by external peer reviewers for quality of technical content. Final selections will be made by the AAP management team in consultation with its internal partners and consortium members.
SUBMISSION AND AWARD TIMELINE
APPLICATION PORTAL
Full proposal packages are due on Wednesday, August 14 at 11:59 PM EST and awards will be announced by early October. AAP management will work with awardees to finalize the plan and budget by November 20, 2024. Programs may begin according to their timeline but not before a final work plan and budget has been approved by AAP management. Programs must begin no later than January 22, 2025 and all program activities must be completed within 18 months of the start date. Progress will be due to AAP management at regular intervals throughout implementation. In addition, AAP will be conducting intermittent surveys of the awardees to evaluate the PIRA grant-making process and how successfully it embodies the AAP’s values of equity, transparency, and accountability.
Read more
By:
Justin Rabineau

