Journal Article

Socio-economic assessment and genetically engineered crops in Africa: Building knowledge for development?

Published on 28 June 2024

How could we know if agricultural development interventions make contributions to sustainable development goals (SDGs)? Genetically engineered (GE) crops are celebrated as a class of technological interventions that can realize multiple SDGs. But recent studies have revealed the gap between GE crop program goals and the approaches used to assess their impacts.

Using four comprehensive reviews of GE crop socio-economic impacts, we identify common shortcomings across three themes: (a) scope, (b) approaches and (c) heterogeneity. We find that the evaluation sciences literature offers alternative assessment approaches that can enable evaluators to better assess impacts, and inform learning and decision-making. We recommend the use of methods that enable evaluations to look beyond the agronomic and productive effects of individual traits to understand wider socio-economic effects.

Cite this publication

Dowd-Uribe, B., Blundo-Canto, G., Glover, D., Louafi, S., Shilomboleni, H., Rock, J. S., Kikulwe, E. M., Fischer, K. and Joly, P.-B. (2024) ‘Socio-economic assessment and genetically engineered crops in Africa: Building knowledge for development?’, Global Food Security 42: 100782, DOI: 10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100782

Authors

Dominic Glover

Rural Futures Cluster Lead

Brian Dowd-Uribe
Genowefa Blundo-Canto
Sélim Louafi
Helena Shilomboleni
Joeva Sean Rock
Enoch M. Kikulwe
Klara Fischer
Pierre-Benoît Joly

Publication details

published by
Elsevier
journal
Global Food Security, volume 42
doi
10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100782
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Africa

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