Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Making Farmer-Managed Seed Systems Work. A comparative study between Tanzania and India

This publication aims to generate a better understanding over the seed landscapes in Tanzania and India. It compares the concepts, policies, actors, and existing strategies over seed systems in these two countries. Findings show that farmer-managed seed systems cannot function on their own without a strong public sector supporting them. In India, for instance, the Biological Diversity Act supports local-level conservation work and a framework for benefit sharing exists. In Tanzania, on the other hand, the Quality Declared Seed (QDS) model is a good starting point to support farmer-managed seed systems. In both countries, growing corporate power and its influence over policy makers poses a fundamental challenge. Based on its findings, the study lists five key recommendations for civil society actors and social movements that seek to strengthen farmer-managed seed systems: conceptual clarity; local action; public rebuilding, national advocacy, and international solidarity.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectFarming Systems
PublisherRosa Luxemburg Stiftung, Tanzania Organic Agriculture Movement (TOAM) and Tanzania Alliance for Biodiversity (TABIO)
Publication year2019
RegionsAfrica; Asia
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://www.rosalux.de/fileadmin/rls_uploads/pdfs/Ausland/Ost-_und_S%C3%BCdostasien/Making-Farmer-Managed-Seed-Systems-Work-2019.pdf
KeywordsSeed management; Access and benefit-sharing; Role of private sector; Value chain