![]() Transition strategyDrafted in May 2010, the Transition strategy was submitted to the CGIAR Consortium Board in May 2010, in response to the CGIAR reform ongoing at the time, while also articulating how the Programme will be brought to an orderly close. Download the GCP Transition strategy 2011–2013 (May 2010); also download the 2011–2013 GCP Medium-Term Plan, which outlines GCP's workplan up to 2013, and complements the Transition Strategy. |
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![]() Strategic framework
2007: GCP's founding document (drafted in 2003) provided a clear path for getting GCP up and running. However, by GCP's third year in 2007, critical questions were being raised regarding how GCP should balance its support between increasing scientific knowledge and delivering impacts to the resource-poor, and subsequently, how it should select and prioritise the regions and crops it supports. To deal with these questions, GCP's Management Team determined that a 'strategic framework' outlining GCP's internal reflections on its mission, structure, research approach and resource allocation at that point in its development would be useful. Download the |
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GCP target environments
In 2006, GCP’s management team commissioned a study on targeting impacts in the GCP. This study identifies the farming systems that are characterised by the highest levels of poverty, together with the crops grown in these systems. Crop production is represented in both tons and hectares, from which the relative importance of each crop to food security and income generation can be inferred. The study has provided much food for thought for the management team as to how to implement this Strategic Framework. Related journal article: Strategic approaches to targeting technology generation: Assessing the coincidence of poverty and drought-prone crop production. View the abstract
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At foundationIn 2003, a proposal to establish GCP was submitted by 10 institutes, comprising three CGIAR Centres (CIMMYT, Bioversity and IRRI) and seven other institutes – Agropolis (France), the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Cornell University (USA), EMBRAPA (Brazil), John Innes Centre (UK), the National Institute of Agricultural Sciences (Japan) and Wageningen University and Reseach Centre (The Netherlands). Download the
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