Skip to main content
Log in

Incorporation of indigenous knowledge and perspectives in agroforestry development

Part 1: Review of methods and their application

  • Published:
Agroforestry Systems Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Calls for the effective integration of indigenous knowledge and perspective into agroforestry are increasingly familiar in agroforestry programmes. This is the result of a need to better target research, ethical concerns about participation and power and the recognition that indigenous knowledge is a potentially powerful source of understanding that may often be complementary to scientific knowledge.

Incorporating indigenous knowledge into development may be achieved through farmer participation in research planning and implementation, external survey of local needs as a basis for planning research or the active synthesis of indigenous and scientific knowledge (in addition to collaboration between the scientist and the farmer) in order to capitalise on their potential complementarity.

It is argued that active synthesis has received inadequate attention. In part this is because it demands rigorous analysis of indigenous and scientific knowledge. This is an exacting process and requires effective means of explicatly representing the knowledge concerned. An approach to this task is briefly introduced. A case study description and evaluation can be found in the accompanying paper [Thapa et al., 1995 (this issue)].

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Amanor KS (1989) 230 Abstracts on farmer participatory research. Network paper, Agricultural Administration Research and Extension Network no. 5. Agricultural Administration Unit, Overseas Development Institute, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Anderson LS and Sinclair FL (1993) Ecological interactions in agroforestry systems. Agroforestry Abstracts 6(4): 207–247

    Google Scholar 

  • Anderson LS, Muetzelfeldt RI and Sinclair FL (1993) An integrated research strategy for modelling and experimentation in agroforestry. Commonwealth Forestry Review 72(3): 166–174

    Google Scholar 

  • Barker D, Oguntoyinbo JS and Richards P (1977) The utility of the Nigerian peasant farmer's knowledge in monitoring of agricultural resources. Chelsea College General Report Series 4. Monitoring and Assessment Centre, London

    Google Scholar 

  • Barrow ECG (1992) Building on local knowledge: the challenge of agroforestry for pastoral areas. Agroforestry Today 3(4): 4–7

    Google Scholar 

  • Beer J, Borel R and Bonnemann A (1990) On-farm agroforestry resarch planning in Costa Rica. In: Budd WW, Duchhard I, Hardesty LH and Steiner F (eds) Planning for Agroforestry. Developments in Landscape Management and Urban Planning, pp 58–78. Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Bentley JW (1994) Stimulating farmer experiments in non-chemical pest control in Central America. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 147–150. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Biggs SD (1985) A farming systems approach: Some unanswered questions. Agricultural Administration 18: 1–12

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Brokensha D and Riley BW (1980) Mbeere knowledge of their vegetation and its relevance for development: A case study from Kenya. In: Brokensha D, Warren DM and Werner O (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Development, pp 111–127. University Press of America, Lanham, MD, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Brokensha D, Warren DM and Werner O (eds) (1980) Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Development. University Press of America, MD, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Brosius JP, Lovelace GW and Marten GG (1986) Ethnoecology: An approach to understanding traditional agricultural knowledge. In: Marten GG (ed) Traditional Agriculture in South-East Asia: A Human Ecology Perspective, pp 187–197. Westview Press, Boulder, CO, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Buck L (1990) Planning agroforestry extension projects, the Care International approach in Kenya. In: Budd WW, Duchhard I, Hardesty LH and Steiner F (eds) Planning for Agroforestry. Developments in Landscpae Management and Urban Planning, pp 101–131. Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Bunderson TW, ElWakeel A, Saad Z and Hahim H (1990) Agroforestry practices and potentials in western Sudan. In: Budd WW, Duchhard I, Hardesty LH and Steiner F (eds) Planning for Agroforestry. Developments in Landscape Management and Urban Planning, pp 227–246. Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Byerlee D, Harrington L and Winklemann DL (1982) Farming systems research: Issues in research strategy and technology design. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 62: 877–904

    Google Scholar 

  • Carruthers I and Chambers R (1987) Rapid rural appraisal for development. Agricultural Administration 8: 433–450

    Google Scholar 

  • Chambers R (1992) Rural appraisal: rapid, relaxed and participatory. IDS discussion paper 311. Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Sussex, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Chambers R (1983) Rural Development: Putting the Last First. Longmans, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Chambers R, Pacey A and Thrupp LA (eds) (1989) Farmer First: Farmer Innovation and Agricultural Research. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Chandler PM (1991) The indigenous knowledge of ecological processes among peasants in the People's Republic of China. Agriculture and Human Values 8(1–2): 59–66

    Google Scholar 

  • CIRAN (1993) Indigenous knowledge resource centres. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor 1(2): 48

    Google Scholar 

  • Compton JL (1989) Strategies and methods for the access, integration and utilisation of indigenous knowledge in agriculture and rural development. In: Warren DM Slikkerveer LJ and Titilola SO (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Implications for Agriculture and International Development. Studies in Technology and Social Change, no.11. Iowa State University, Iowa City, Iowa, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Conklin HC (1957) Hanunoo agriculture, a report on an integral system of shifting cultivation in the Philippines. Forestry development paper no. 12. FAO, Rome, Italy

    Google Scholar 

  • Drinkwater M (1994) Knowledge, consciousness and prejudice: Adaptive agricultural research in Zambia. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 32–41. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Geertz C (1963) Agricultural Involution: The Process of Ecological Change in Indonesia. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Gholz HL (ed) (1987) Agroforestry: Realities, Possibilities and Potentials. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Gladwin C (1980) Cognitive strategies and adoption decisions: A case study of non-adoption of an agronomic recommendation (Mexico). In: Brokensha D, Warren DM and Werner O (eds) Indigenou Knowledge Systems and Development, pp 9–28. University Press of America, Lanham, MD, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Hatch JK (1976) The Corn Farmers of Motupe: A Study of Traditional Farming Practices in Northern Coastal Peru. Monograph, Land Tenure Centre, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Haverkort B, Gibbon D and Bayer W (1991) Research for the Future: An Overview of Exciting Research in Sub-Saharan Africa for the Development of Low-External Input and Sustainable Agriculture. SAREC-ILEIA, Leusden, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Hildebrand PE (1990) Farming systems research — extension. In: Jones JGW and Street PR (eds) Systems Theory Applied to Agriculture and the Food Chain, pp 131–143. Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Howes M and Chambers R (1980) Indigenous technical knowledge: Analysis, implications and issues. In: Brokensha D, Warren DM and Werner O (eds) Idgenous Knowledge Systems and Development, pp 323–334. University Press of America, Lanham, MD, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Ison RJ (1993) Soft systems: A non-computer view of decision support. In: Stuth JW and Lyons BG (eds) Decision Support Systems for the Management of Grazing Lands, pp 83–118. Man and the Biosphere Series, volume 11, UNESCO, Paris, France

    Google Scholar 

  • Johnson AW (1972) Individuality and experimentation in traditional agriculture. Human Ecology 1: 149–159

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kendon G, Walker DH, Robertson D, Haggith M, Sinclair FL and Muetzelfeldt RI (in press) Supporting customised reasoning in the agroforestry domain. New Review of Applied Expert Systems

  • Khush GS (1993) Breeding rice for sustainable agricultural systems. In: Buxton DR, Shibles R, Forsberg RA, Blad BL, Asay KH, Paulsen GM and Wilson RF (eds) International Crop Science 1. Based on the International Crop Science Congress sponsored by Iowa State University and the Crop Science Society of America, Ames, IA, 14–22 July. Crop Science Society of America, Inc, Madison, WI, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Macarenhas J, Shah P, Joseph S, Jayakaran R, Devavaram J, Ramachandran V, Fernandez A, Chambers R and Pretty J (eds) (1991) Participatory Rural Appraisal: Proceedings of the February 1991 Bangalore PRA Trainers Workshop. RRA notes 13. Sustainable Agriculture Programme, IIED, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Mathias-Mundy E, Muchena O, McKiernan G and Mundy P (1992) Indigenous Technical Knowledge of Private Tree Management. Bibliographies in Technology and Social Change Series no. 7. Technology and Social Change Program in collaboration with CIKARD and LEAD. Center for Indigenous Knowledge and Rural Development (CIKARD), Iowa State University Research Foundation, Ames, IA, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • McKiernan G (1989) The CIKARD international documentation unit and library of indigenous knowledge for agriculture and rural development. In: Warren DM, Slikkerveer LJ, Titilola SO (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Implications for Agriculture and International Development. Studies in Technology and Social Change, no. 11. Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Meehan P (1980) Science, ethnoscience, and agricultural knowledge utilisation. In: Brokensha D, Warren DM and Werner O (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Development, pp 377–386. University Press of America, Lanham, MD, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Millar D (1994) Experimenting farmers in Northern Ghana. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 160–165. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Nair PKR (1990) The prospects for agroforestry in the tropics. World Bank technical paper 131.

  • Posey DA (1985) Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: The case of the Kayapo Indians of the Brazilian Amazon. Agroforestry Systems 3: 139–158

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Raintree JB (1987) Design & Development Users Manual: An Introduction to Agroforestry Diagnosis and Design. ICRAF, Nairobi, Keya

    Google Scholar 

  • Raintree JB (1990) Theory and practice of agroforestry development and design. In: MacDicken KG and Vergara NT (eds) Agroforestry Classification and Management, pp 58–97. John Wiley and Sons, New York, NY, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Richards AJ (1939) Land, Labour and Diet in Northern Rhodesia. Oxford University Press for the International Institute of African Languages and Culture, Oxford, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Richards P (1985) Indigenous Agricultural Revolution. Hutchinson & Co, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Richards P (1994) Local knowledge formation and validation: The case of rice production in Sierra Leone. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 165–170. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Rocheleau DE (1987) The user perspective and the agroforestry research and action agenda. In: Gholz HL (ed) Agroforestry: Realities, Possibilities and Potentials, pp 59–87. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Scoones I and Thompson J (1994) Knowledge, power and agriculture — towards a theoretical understanding. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 16–32. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Simmonds NW (1985) Farming systems research: A review. World Bank technical paper no. 43

  • Slikkerveer LJ (1989) Changing values and attitudes of social and natural scientists towards indigenous peoples and their knowledge systems. In: Warren DM, Slikkerveer LJ and Titilola SO (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Implications for Agriculture and International Development. Studies in Technology and Social Change, no. 11. Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Stolzenbach A (1994) Learning by improvization: Farmers' experimentation in Mali. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 1155–1160. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Thapa B, Sinclair FL and Walker DH (1995) Incorporation of indigenous knowledge and perspectives in agroforestry development. Part 2: Case-study on the impact of explicit representation of farmers' knowledge. Agroforestry Systems (this issue)

  • Van den Hoek A and Bekkering T (1990) Planning of agroforestry programmes in Java, Indonesia. In: Budd WW, Duchhard I, Hardesty LH and Steiner F (eds) Planning for Agroforestry. Developments in Landscape Management and Urban Planning, pp 79–100. Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Walker DH, Sinclair FL and Kendon G (in press) A knowledge-based systems approach to agroforestry research and extension. AI Applications

  • Walker DH, Sinclair FL, Kendon G, Robertson D, Muetzelfeldt RI, Haggith M and Turner GS (1994) Agroforestry Knowledge Toolkit: Methodological Guidelines, Computer Software and Manual for AKT1 and AKT2, Supporting the Use of a Knowledge-Based Systems Approach in Agroforestry Research and Extension. School of Agricultural and Forest Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor, UK, 138 pp

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren DM (1989) The impact of nineteenth century social science in establishing negative values and attitudes to indigenous knowledge systems. In: Warren DM, Slikkerveer LJ and Titilola SO (eds) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Implications for Agriculture and International Development. Studies in Technology and Socieal Change. no. 11. Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren DM (ed) (1991a) Indigenous agricultural knowledge systems and development. Agriculture and Human Values 8(1–2), 179 pp

  • Warren DM (1991b) Using Indigenous Knowledge in Agricultural Development. Discussion paper no. 127. The World Bank, Washington DC, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren DM and Cashman K (1988) Indigenous Knowledge for Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development. Gatekeeper Series no. SA10, Sustainable Agriculture Programme. International Institute for Environment and Development, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren DM, Slikkerveer LJ and Titilola SO (eds) (1989) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Implications for Agriculture and International Development. Studies in Technology and Social Change, no. 11. Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren DM, Brokensha D and Slikerver LJ (eds) (1994) Indigenous Knowledge Systems: The Cultural Dimension of Development. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK, 640 pp

    Google Scholar 

  • Winarto Y (1994) Encouraging knowledge exchange: Integrated pest management in Indonesia. In: Scoones I and Thompson J (eds) Beyond Farmer First, pp 150–155. Intermediate Technology Publications, London, UK

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Walker, D.H., Sinclair, F.L. & Thapa, B. Incorporation of indigenous knowledge and perspectives in agroforestry development. Agroforest Syst 30, 235–248 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00708923

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00708923

Key words

Navigation