Sunday, April 7, 2013

Prof. Oloruntoba Urges Capacity Building In Agric, Rural Development


Prof. Abayomi Oloruntoba

A Professor of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development Abayomi Oloruntoba, has called on African governments and other actors in the agricultural sector to seriously consider capacity building as an elixir for agricultural and rural development.

According to him, amid all the bigger challenges confronting agriculture on the African continent capacity building seemed to be receiving less attention or not at all from stakeholders in the sector when addressing them, thus the need for them to seriously consider lack of capacity building as a gap that needed to be bridged in order to ensure positive impact was made in smallholder farming in rural areas. 

Delivering the maiden inaugural lecture of the University for Development Studies (UDS) on the theme: “Unleashing The Power of Capacity Building As An Elixir For Agricultural And Rural Development”, Prof. Oloruntoba observed that, in Africa, the pervasive poverty in rural areas was often blamed on lack of capacity building of the rural folks as a result of numerous ineffective strategies employed in eradicating poverty. He noted that, if poverty was to be reduced, productivity of the agricultural sector must be increased. 

However, agricultural productivity, he argued, would not increase if the capacity of farmers and other actors in the agricultural value chain remained low, preventing them from being innovative. “Innovations could include new agricultural knowledge or technologies related to primary production, processing, and commercialization –all of which can positively affect productivity, competitiveness, and livelihoods of farmers and others. By putting farmers and other actors at the front burner of innovative practices and encouraging learning through the interchange of ideas, successes, and failures, they could develop the capacity to operate efficiently in the knowledge economy”, he emphasised.

He also stated that, in sub-Sahara Africa, capacity building was important for agriculture because extension staff worked closely with farmers. “They take on roles as facilitators by helping farmers to identify their production problems and opportunities, thereby helping them to help themselves”, he said, stressing “capacity building is a concept closely related to education, training and human resource development.”   

But Prof. Oloruntoba identified poor funding attitude by governments towards agriculture research and development; poorly trained extension staff by training institutions; lack of coordination among agriculture and rural development stakeholders such as farmers, policymakers, universities, NGOs, among others as they worked independently of each other without synergy; and refusal to use ICT mechanisms such as mobile phones to harness ICT potential in extension services since there were low numbers of extension agents to disseminate the required information needs of farmers as some of the challenges confronting capacity building. 

He maintained that agricultural development was key to ending hunger in sub-Saharan Africa, and advocated that all stakeholders in this sector should promote and facilitate continual capacity building. 

He also observed that students’ farm practical had proved to be a novel programme availing opportunity for undergraduate students to gain practical skills supplemented by theoretical knowledge in agriculture. In order to make the programme relevant and increase the quality of teaching, he urged instructors to avail themselves of modern techniques in agriculture.

Prof. Oloruntoba also recommended that farmers should be encouraged to participate in the research process and in the promotion of environmentally sustainable agriculture. 

Inaugural lectures have been an essential feature of university life for centuries. It is a significant event in an academic staff member’s career at the university to mark his/her promotion or appointment to full professorship. For the university, it is an occasion to celebrate and showcase the academic achievements of its staff. It therefore provides newly promoted/appointed professors with the opportunity to inform colleagues, the campus community and the general public of their work to date.

Thus, the first inaugural lecture of the UDS in Tamale was intended to celebrate the elevation of Prof. Abayomi Oloruntoba of the Department of Agricultural Extension, Rural Development and Gender Studies of the Faculty of Agriculture of the UDS to full professorship in January, 2012.

Prof. Oloruntoba has an interesting mix of academic and professional backgrounds which span over three decades as a lecturer, management trainer, extensionist, researcher and consultant all of which put him in good stead for his role as Professor of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development.

He graduated with a B.Sc (Agriculture) in Forest Resources Management from Nigeria’s Premiere University, the University of Ibadan, in July 1979. He also earned a Master’s degree in Resource Science with specialization in Economics and Policy from the University of California, Berkely, U.S.A in December 1984 and a Ph.D. degree in Agricultural Extension and Rural Development from the University of Ibadan in May 2000.

Oloruntoba was a visiting scholar at the University of Ghana, Department of Agricultural Extension during his sabbatical leave in 2007/08. In 2010, he joined the UDS and was appointed to full professor of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development in January 2012.

Prof. Oloruntoba’s lecture examined capacity building as it related to agriculture and rural development drawing on a compendium of research expositions and ‘hands-on’ experience of himself. The paper outlined the different types of capacity building methods used, namely; capacity building in agricultural extension for farmers, extension, researchers and students. This was followed by constraints confronting capacity development; conclusions and policy recommendations were made aimed at improving the capacity building of agriculture and rural development practitioners, research scientists, farmers and students.  

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