Pathways to Sustainable Intensification: Participatory Designing of Adapted Farming System Innovations
Abstract
Most farmers in Western Rajasthan, India face an uncertain, impoverished future. The region is affected by frequent droughts, overexploitation
of groundwater, deteriorating soil and water quality, low productivity, weak institutions, malnutrition, continuously decreasing
landholding size, and a burgeoning population of 28 million. With negative water balance for all but a few months of the year,
Rajasthani farmers are on the cutting edge of climate change. In this situation, common property resources, such as fodder, herbs, and
water, ease stress on livelihoods. By the same token, the social and environmental cost of the poor management of these resources is
keenly felt. That is why the International Crops Research Institute for the SemiArid
Tropics (ICRISAT), as part of the Consultative
Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) Program on Dryland Systems, has teamed up with rural dryland communities to
find integrated approaches to resource management