Outsourcing Agricultural Advisory Services
Enhancing Rural Innovation in Sub-Saharan Africa

Paper: 978 90 6832 646 8
Price: $35.00
Published: July 2008 

Publisher: KIT Publishers
150 pp., 7" x 9"
Series: Bulletins of the Royal Tropical Institute 380
As a result of policies outlined under NEPAD, outsourcing advisory services—and sometimes research—has become a key component of knowledge systems in many countries of sub-Saharan Africa. While it is generally thought that outsourcing will benefit resource-poor farmers by orienting services towards their needs, not much is known about the implications of outsourcing or about outsourcing modalities.

This Bulletin presents the findings from case studies on outsourcing advisory services in Tanzania, Mozambique, Uganda and Mali. The lessons presented here concern the enabling environment at local and national level, demand and supply capacity, changing roles and responsibilities, outsourcing functions and performance of outsourcing systems, as well as the overriding importance of institutional development. Sharing the experiences from the pilot programs presented here, including Uganda’s National Agricultural Advisory Services Program, will help guide organizations involved in demand-driven service provision in agriculture or social sectors such as rural health and education.

Table of Contents:
Foreword; Acknowledgements; List of Acronyms; PART I OUTSOURCING AGRICULTURAL ADVISORY SERVICES FOR INNOVATION: 1) Background; 2) Agricultural Advisory Service Systems; 3) Methodology and Analytical Framework; 4) Lessons Learned; 5) Guidelines for Enhancing Advisory Service Provision Through Outsourcing; References; Glossary; PART II CASE STUDIES ON OUTSOURCING AGRICULTURAL SERVICES: 1) Outsourcing Experiences in Uganda; 2) Outsourcing Agricultural Advisory Services in Mozambique; 3) Outsourcing Agricultural Advisory Services in Tanzania; 4) Outsourcing Agricultural Advisory Services in Mali; About the Authors and Editors.