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Research in Organic Agriculture
IFOAM’s Role in Organic Agricultural Research
  • IFOAM acts as the world leader in evolving further the conceptual framework of organic agriculture research in the societal and institutional context by collaborating with high profile researchers’ experience in and supportive of organic agriculture research at global level.  
  • IFOAM innfluences research policy makers with the aim to broaden the funding base for organic agriculture research and the adoption of organic agriculture research by international agricultural research institutions through lobbying and advocacy. (CGIAR, FAO, the World Bank, national governments, etc.)
  • IFOAM facilitates collaboration and exchange at global and regional level to share research experiences, approaches and methodologies.
  • IFOAM supports member organizations to influence national and regional research policy makers (NARS) to adopt organic agriculture research policy and a stakeholder-based research policy process. IFOAM provides support to member efforts.
Organic Research is distinguished from other agriculture research in the following ways:
  • Organic agriculture research is distinct from all other agricultural research, not necessarily in the nature of the issues and problems researched and certainly not for any research methods unique to it.
  • The distinction is in the context under which organic research is conducted and the ethos prevailing in the research environment.
  • Organic agricultural research has systemic orientation, is inter-disciplinary in nature, links to societal concerns and is committed to improving the knowledge base of beneficiaries of that research.
  • Therefore, researchers in organic agriculture are open to learning and developing their competencies through practice.
  • Organic research, for it to be socially relevant and meaningful, has to support changes at methodological, personal and institutional level.
  • The need to “solve specific problems” at the production level (e.g. soil nutrients, breeding, rotations) and to “improve whole situations” at industry and associated levels (food quality and safety, animal welfare, ethics) are just as important in organic agricultural research as they have been in all agriculture. Therefore, where appropriate, organic agricultural research incorporates reductionism tactics and thinking with systemic approaches and methodologies devised according to context.
  • The relevance of farmers’ science by experience and wealth of indigenous knowledge has proven to be very useful in further developing research in organic agriculture.
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Links
International Society for Organic Farming Research
CABI Publishing On Organic Research


PDF-Downloads
Influence of organic diet on the amount of conjugated linoleic acids in breast milk of lactating women in the Netherlands
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