Regional Policy Forum on
Developing Public Policies for Family Farming:
Reaching Out to the Grassroots through Participatory Policy Making
27 April 2021, 8:00 AM – 12:00 NN (ICT)

Download and fill out this form to register: Registration Form

 

Background and Rationale

The participation of the stakeholders, especially the beneficiaries of public policy, has become an essential part of the policy development process. In the past, the decision-making process failed to include stakeholders who are most affected by the policies that were being crafted then. This resulted in “Type III errors” or solving the wrong problems in the stage of problem structuring (Jordan and Turnpenny, 2015). This type of error encourages the use of a participatory approach to policy development.

Participatory policy making is a general approach which facilitates the inclusion of various stakeholders in the design of policies through consultative or participatory means to ensure accountability, transparency, and active citizenship. Participatory policy making can either be top-down, i.e., the government initiating the policymaking, or bottom-up, i.e., a particular stakeholder group seeking to influence a specific policy. It can also be initiated by external bodies such as international development organizations and donors. The government and these organizations play a significant role in opening political space, creating the right conditions, and setting up the necessary structures and processes to enable participatory policy making. On the other hand, it is the civil society organizations (CSOs) that help raise awareness about the issues at stake, help citizens and communities organize themselves, and advocate for more participatory policymaking (Rietbergen-McCracken, n.d.).

Crafting effective and appropriate policies requires diverse and complex information and expertise, and participation presents a wider range of information, ideas, perspectives, and experiences to the process. Popular participation likewise helps build grassroots capacity to effectively voice out their needs and concerns, while allowing the government to recognize multiple views and address sometimes conflicting perspectives. People participation can also reconcile competing agendas, mediate conflicting interests, and balance the concerns of all interested persons and affected parties. It likewise enhances the constituencies’ sense of ownership and commitment to policy objectives, which increases support for and involvement in policy implementation, including supporting legislation and project design. These would then result to better legislation and projects that are effectively enforced and successfully completed. Yet participation also presents real costs and risks. It requires time and resources, thereby affecting schedules and budgets. As it often involves incorporating stakeholder interests into decisions, popular participation can also raise expectations, which are not all met. Participation can also trigger conflicts among different stakeholders if not ensured across the board and resulting in an unequal distribution of benefits (Veit, 1998).

SEARCA, in its 11th Five Year Plan (FYP) themed Accelerating Transformation Through Agricultural Innovation (ATTAIN), has realigned its direction towards transformation of the agriculture industry that focuses on policy, institutional, social, and technological innovations. SEARCA likewise recognizes the importance of the farmers and farming families as key partners and stakeholders to propel the agriculture industry towards food and nutrition security and poverty reduction. It has also seen the role of policy to address pertinent issues that hamper the progress of the agricultural sector (SEARCA, 2020).

Considered as the backbone of global agriculture, family farming is seen as key to achieving food security and sustainable rural development, presenting potential solutions to ending poverty, undernourishment, and malnutrition. The achievement of these goals will depend primarily on the development of public policies that would support family farms to become productive and sustainable, consequently allowing them to innovate and adapt given their diverse nature and the complexity of the challenges they faced (FAO, 2014; FAO and IFAD, 2019).

Given the success of the International Year of Family Farming (IYFF) in 2014, the United Nations, during its 72nd Session in 2017, proclaimed 2019-2028 as the UN Decade of Family Farming (UNDFF). UNDFF presents a framework for countries to develop public policies and investments to support family farming and to contribute to the achievement of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The success of the UNDFF will be ensured through the development of coherent, cross-sectoral policies, which concurrently address the environmental, economic, and social dimensions of agricultural and rural development (FAO and IFAD, 2019).

A Global Action Plan was developed for the UNDFF to provide a detailed guidance for the international community on collective, coherent, and comprehensive actions to support family farmers. It was designed around seven mutually reinforcing pillars of work and recommends a series of interconnected actions from the local to the global level (http://www.fao.org/family-farming-decade/home/en/). The UNDFF Global Action Plan envisions the creation of 100 National Action Plans (NAPs) of Family Farming by 2024. These NAPs will serve as roadmaps for the countries to progress with the implementation of the UNDFF and ensure that actions reach the grass-roots level (FAO and IFAD, 2019). Hence, it is deemed beneficial to investigate how participation of farmers and farming families can influence effective public policy making specifically in the context of family farming.

It is in this context that SEARCA’s Research and Thought Leadership Department (RTLD), through its Policy and Program Advisory (PPA), will organize a virtual regional policy forum, in partnership with the Asian Farmers’ Association for Sustainable Rural Development (AFA), to discuss the importance and viability of participatory policy making as a strategy for public policy development in ensuring policy objectives and outputs caters to the needs of its target beneficiaries, primarily the farmers and farming families.

Forum Objectives

The proposed regional policy forum generally aims to provide a venue to identify and analyze the enabling factors and constraints to participatory policy making and how such a bottom-up approach can help ensure policy objectives are met and translated into equitable and sustainable benefits for its intended beneficiaries, primarily those at the grassroots level.

Specifically, the forum aims to:

  1. Identify lessons, gaps, and bottlenecks in operationalizing participatory policy making as experienced by various actors in Southeast Asian countries;
  2. Provide evidence on how people participation has been an effective method for public policy making by looking at specific country cases as well as the experiences in the development of UNDFF’s National Action Plans (NAPs) in selected countries in Southeast Asia; and
  3. Gather insights and recommendations on how to further promote and strengthen the adoption of participatory policy making in public policy development to maximize the benefits that reaches the grassroots and ensure that policies cater to their actual needs.

Expected Output

  1. A detailed documentation of information shared by relevant stakeholders in support of the participatory policy making strategy particularly in the context of family farming (proceedings); and
  2. A set of recommendations on how to further strengthen the participation of farmers and farming families in the development of public policies starting with family farming (policy brief).

Target Participants / Resource Persons

The proposed regional policy forum will be attended by representatives from SEARCA, AFA and its national platforms in Southeast Asia, other farmers’, and civil society organizations (e.g., AsiaDHRRA), as well as the academe and research institutions with recent initiatives and projects related to family farming in Southeast Asia.

References

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). 2014. The State of Food and Agriculture: Innovation in Family Farming. Retrieved from: http://www.fao.org/3/a-i4040e.pdf.

FAO and IFAD. 2019. United Nations Decade of Family Farming 2019-2028. Global Action Plan. Rome.

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO. Retrieved from: http://www.fao.org/3/ca4672en/ca4672en.pdf.

Jordan, A. J. and Turnpenny, J. R. 2015. The Tools of Policy Formulation: Actors, Capacities, Venues and Effects. Retrieved from https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/182379/1/978-1-78347-704-3.pdf.

Rietbergen-McCracken, J. n.d. Participatory Policy Making. Retrieved from: https://www.civicus.org/documents/toolkits/PGX_F_ParticipatoryPolicy%20Making.pdf.

Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA). 2020. SEAMEO SEARCA 11th Five-Year Plan FY 2020/2021 – FY 2024/2025 Executive Summary. Retrieved from: https://www.searca.org/phocadownload/SEARCA-11th-FYP-Executive-Summary.pdf?ver=10.

United Nations Decade of Family Farming 2019-2028 Official Website http://www.fao.org/family-farming-decade/home/en/

Veit, P. 1998. Africa’s Valuable Assets: A Reader in Natural Resource Management. Participatory Policy-making and the Role of Local Non-governmental Organizations. Retrieved from: http://nzdl.org/cgi-bin/library?e=d-00000-00—off-0envl–00-0—-0-10-0—0—0direct-10—4——-0-1l–11-en-50—20-about—00-0-1-00-0-0-11—-0-0-&a=d&c=envl&cl=CL2.5.1&d=HASH409dff535464b6806fe89e.8.3.

 

PROGRAMME

TIME (ICT)  
8:00 – 8:15 Opening Session (15 mins)

 

Welcome Remarks (5 mins)

 

 

 

About the Policy Forum (5 mins)

 

 

 

 

Introduction of Participants, Forum Guidelines, and Group Photo (5 mins)

 

 

Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio

Director

SEARCA

 

Dr. Pedcris M. Orencio

Program Head

Research and Thought Leadership Department (RTLD), SEARCA

 

Ms. Jean Rebecca D. Labios

Program Specialist

Training for Development (T4D), SEARCA

8:15 – 9:00 SESSION 1. Participatory Policy Making in the context of Family Farming in Southeast Asia

(45 mins)

 

Keynote Message (5 mins)

 

 

 

 

AFA Video Presentation (20 mins)

 

Young Farmers’ Perspective (10 mins)

 

 

 

 

 

Open Forum (10 mins)

 

 

 

 

 

Ms. Ma. Estrella Penunia-Banzuela

Secretary General

Asian Farmers’ Association for Sustainable Rural Development (AFA)

 

 

 

Mr. Charlie Balico

Representative

Pambansang Samahan ng mga Nagkakaisang Kabataang Magsasaka (PAMANAKA) and

AFA Young Farmers Committee

 

 

9:00 – 9:35 SESSION 2. Participatory Policy Making in Southeast Asia: Selected Country Cases

(35 mins)

 

Indonesia (10 mins)

 

 

 

Philippines (10 mins)

 

 

 

Vietnam (10 mins)

 

 

 

Open Forum (5 mins)

 

 

 

 

 

Mr. Eko Cahyono

Senior Researcher

Sajogyo Institute (SAINS)

 

Dr. Aileen V. Lapitan

Assistant Professor

University of the Philippines Los Baños

 

Dr. Dao The Anh

Vice President

Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Sciences

9:35 – 10:15 SESSION 3. Development of the UNDFF National Action Plans: Lessons, Gaps, and Bottlenecks

(40 mins)

 

Indonesia National Action Plan

(10 mins)

 

 

Philippines National Action Plan

(10 mins)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lao PDR National Action Plan

(10 mins)

 

 

 

Open Forum (10 mins)

 

 

 

 

 

Ms. Ika Krishnayanti

International Relations Officer

Indonesian Farmers Alliance

 

Dr. Rosana Mula

Assistant Director

Agriculture Training Institute

Department of Agriculture (DA)

 

Mr. Raul Socrates Banzuela

Executive Director

Pambansang Kilusan ng mga Samahang Magsasaka (PAKISAMA)

 

Mr. Pierre Ferrand (TBC)

Agriculture Officer

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

10:15 – 10:25 Break (10 mins)  
10:25 – 11:25 SESSION 4. Breakout (60 mins) Facilitators:

Dr. Romeo V. Labios

Technical Advisor

Partnerships Unit (PU), SEARCA

 

Ms. Irish Baguilat

Coordinator

UN Decade of Family Farming and Women Farmers’ Agenda, AFA

 

Ms. Rhine Joy G. Lesigues

Chair

IFAD Philippines Gender Network (IPGN)

 

Rapporteurs:

Ms. Rochella B. Lapitan

Senior Program Associate

RTLD, SEARCA

 

Ms. Donna Bae N. Malayang

Senior Program Associate

RTLD, SEARCA

 

Ms. Ruth Jazrel M. Bandong

Project Associate

RTLD, SEARCA

 

11:25 – 11:55 SESSION 4. Plenary (30 mins)

 

Presentation of Group Outputs

(15 mins)

 

Open Forum (15 mins)

Facilitator:

Ms. Bernice Anne D. De Torres

Program Specialist

Research and Thought Leadership Department (RTLD), SEARCA

11:55 – 12:00 Synthesis and Closing (5 mins) Dr. Pedcris M. Orencio
Moderator:

Ms. Jean Rebecca D. Labios

 

Watch the event here:

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View the presentations here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/necstcx7irzs7uc/AABfN_JscrDpdYu1Xk9w6v3-a?dl=0

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