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Established in 1977,
the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
(ICARDA) is governed by an independent Board of Trustees. Based at Aleppo,
Syria, it is one of 16 centers supported by the Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
ICARDA serves the entire developing
world for the improvement of lentil, barley and faba bean; all dry-area
developing countries for the improvement of on-farm water-use efficiency,
rangeland, and small-ruminant production; and the Central and West Asia
and North Africa region for the improvement of bread and durum wheats,
chickpea, and farming systems. ICARDAs research provides global
benefits of poverty alleviation through productivity improvements integrated
with sustainable natural-resource management practices. ICARDA meets
this challenge through research, training, and dissemination of information
in partnership with the national agricultural research and development
systems.
The results of research are transferred
through ICARDAs cooperation with national and regional research
institutions, with universities and ministries of agriculture, and through
the technical assistance and training that the Center provides. A range
of training programs is offered, from residential courses for groups
to advanced research opportunities for individuals. These efforts are
supported by seminars, publications, and specialized information services.
The CGIAR is an international group of representatives of donor
agencies, eminent agricultural scientists, and institutional administrators
from developed and developing countries who guide and support its work.
Its mission is to promote sustainable agriculture to alleviate poverty
and hunger and achieve food security in developing countries. Since
its foundation in 1971, it has brought together many of the worlds
leading scientists and agricultural researchers in a unique SouthNorth
partnership to reduce poverty and hunger.
The Future Harvest centers of
the CGIAR conducts strategic and applied research, with their products
being international public goods, and focus their research agenda on
problem-solving through interdisciplinary programs implemented in collaboration
with a range of partners. These programs concentrate on increasing productivity,
protecting the environment, saving biodiversity, improving policies,
and strengthening national agricultural research systems.
The World Bank, the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP), and the International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD) are cosponsors of the CGIAR. The World Bank provides the CGIAR
System with a Secretariat in Washington, DC. A science Council, with
its Secretariat at FAO in Rome, assists the System in the development
of its research program.
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