Early years (1971-1990) CGIAR arose in response to the widespread concern in the mid-20th century that rapid increases in human populations would soon lead to widespread
famine. Starting in 1943, the
Rockefeller Foundation and the
Mexican government laid the seeds for the
Green Revolution when they established the Office of Special Studies, which resulted in the establishment of the
International Rice Research Institute (
IRRI) in 1960 and
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) in 1963 with support from the
Rockefeller Foundation and
Ford Foundation. These centers work toward developing high-yielding, disease-resistant varieties that dramatically increased production of these staple cereals, and turned India, for example, from a country regularly facing starvation in the 1960s to a net exporter of cereals by the late-1970s. But it was clear that the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations alone could not fund all the agricultural research and development efforts needed to feed the world's population. In 1969, the
Pearson Commission on International Development urged the international community to undertake "intensive international effort" to support "research specializing in food supplies and tropical agriculture". In 1970, the Rockefeller Foundation proposed a worldwide network of agricultural research centers under a permanent secretariat. Australian economist
Sir John Crawford was appointed as the inaugural chair of the Technical Advisory Committee. CGIAR originally supported four centers: CIMMYT, IRRI, the
International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and the
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA). The initial focus on the staple cereals—rice, wheat and maize—widened during the 1970s to include cassava, chickpea, sorghum, potato, millets and other food crops, and encompassed livestock, farming systems, the conservation of
genetic resources, plant nutrition, water management, policy research, and services to national agricultural research centers in developing countries.
Expansion and consolidation (1991-2000) By the 1990s the number of centers supported by CGIAR had grown to 18. Mergers between the two livestock centers the
International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases (ILRAD) and the
International Livestock Centre for Africa (ILCA)) and the absorption of work on bananas and plantains into the program of the
International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI; now
Bioversity International) reduced the number to 16. Later another center (ISNAR) was absorbed, reducing the total number of supported centers to 15. The reduction in the number of supported centers was not enough to address problems facing the group. These included the logistics of funders and the group alike in dealing with a large number of centers. This led to the creation of three classes of centers, divided into high, medium, and low impact delivery. At the same time, a number of aid recipient countries like China, India, and Malaysia created their own development agencies and developed cadres of agricultural scientists. Private donors and industries also contributed, while research institutions in the rich world turned their attention to problems of the poor. CGIAR, however, failed to embrace these changes in any effective way.
CGIAR reforms (2001–2007) Seeking to increase its efficiency and build on its previous successes, CGIAR embarked on a program of reform in 2001. Key among the changes implemented was the adoption of Challenge Programs as a means of harnessing the strengths of the diverse centers to address major global or regional issues. Three Challenge Programs were established within the supported research centers and a fourth to FARA, a research forum in Africa: • Water and Food, aimed at producing more food using less water; (Including
Basin Focal Projects) • HarvestPlus, to improve the micronutrient content of staple foods; and • Generation, aimed at increasing the use of
crop genetic resources to create a new generation of plants that meet farmers and consumers needs.
A new CGIAR (2008-2021) In 2008, CGIAR embarked on a change process to improve the engagement between all stakeholders in international agricultural research for development—donors, researchers and beneficiaries—and to refocus the efforts of the centers on major global development challenges. A key objective was to integrate the work of the centers and their partners, avoiding fragmentation and duplication of effort. CGIAR components during this time included the CGIAR Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers, the CGIAR Fund, the CGIAR Independent Science and Partnership Council (ISPC) and partners. Research was guided by the CGIAR Strategy and Results Framework. The CGIAR Consortium united the centers supported by CGIAR; it coordinated limited research activities of about 15 research projects (see list below) among the centers and provided donors with a single contact point to centers. The CGIAR Fund aimed to harmonize the efforts of donors to contribute to agricultural research for development, increased the funding available by reducing or eliminating duplication of effort among the centers and promoted greater financial stability. The CGIAR ISPC, appointed by the CGIAR Fund Council, provided advice to the funders of CGIAR, particularly in ensuring that CGIAR's research programs are aligned with the Strategy and Results Framework. It provided a bridge between the funders and the CGIAR Consortium. The hope was that the Strategy and Results Framework would provide the strategic direction for the centers and CGIAR Research Programs, ensuring that they focus on delivering measurable results that contribute to achieving CGIAR objectives. However the research programs were designed prior to the Framework being ready, so now some refitting had to take place to get the programs inline with it.
CGIAR Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers The
CGIAR Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers was established in April 2010 to coordinate and support the work of the 15 international agricultural research centers supported by CGIAR. It played a central role in formulating the CGIAR Strategy and Results Framework (SRF) that guided the work of CGIAR-supported centers on CGIAR funded research and developing CGIAR Research Programs under the SRF. The work of the CGIAR Consortium was governed by the Consortium Board, a 10-member panel that had fiduciary responsibility for CGIAR Research Programs, including monitoring and evaluation and reporting progress to donors. CGIAR Research Programs were approved and funded by the CGIAR Fund on a contractual basis through performance agreements.
Agri-Food Systems CGIAR Research Programs Agri-Food Systems CGIAR Research Programs were multi-center, multi-partner initiatives built on three core principles: impact on CGIAR's four system-level objectives; making the most of the centers' strengths; and strong and effective partnerships. The following research programs comprised the CGIAR Research Portfolio of 2017-2021 (lead centers shown in brackets): • FISH - Fish Agri-Food Systems (
WorldFish) • FTA - Forests, Trees, and Agroforestry (
CIFOR) • Grain Legumes and Dryland Cereals (
ICRISAT) • WHEAT - Global Alliance for Improving Food Security and the Livelihoods of the Resource-poor in the Developing World (
CIMMYT) • Livestock (
ILRI) • Maize (CIMMYT) • Rice (
IRRI) • - (
CIP)
Global Integrating Programs Cross-cutting Global Integrating Programs framed to work closely with the Agri-Food Systems Programs within relevant agro-ecological systems. Four programs formed part of the 2017-2021 Portfolio. • CCAFS - Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CIAT) • A4NH - Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (
IFPRI) • PIM - Policies, Institutions, & Markets (
IFPRI) • WLE -
Water, Land and Ecosystems (
IWMI)
Former programs • GRiSP - A
Global Rice Science Partnership (IRRI) • Aquatic Agricultural Systems - Harnessing the Development Potential of Aquatic Agricultural Systems by and for the poor (ILRI) • Dryland Systems • Humidtropics • Grain Legumes (ICRISAT) A new strategy and results framework was approved in 2015 and the portfolio of research programs revised. The systems programs dryland systems, aquatic agricultural systems, and Humidtropics ceased to be standalone programs, even though they were seen as what was new to the reformed CGIAR, but were not given a real chance to take off and prosper, mainly due to funding reductions, but also because of a refocus on commodity value chains. These commodity programs were renamed to, for example, RTB Systems Program or Rice Systems Program. Some work of the earlier systems programs were incorporated, but most was lost.
Research platforms CGIAR supported four research platforms from 2017 to 2021: • CGIAR Platform • CGIAR • CGIAR • CGIAR GENDER (Gender Equality in Food Systems Research) Platform == Impacts ==