Aquaculture farmer organizations and cluster management – Concepts and experiences
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farmers to join. In these cases, where more fundamental and structural changes have
to be made, FOs will find it difficult to succeed and may not be the most appropriate
response, especially when poor subsistence farmers who lack critical technical and
entrepreneurial capacities are the targets of development intervention. This may not
always be the case and can depend on the context and types of constraints that farmers
face and the type of support they receive. If interventions are focused on empowerment
of these groups
and are managed carefully, perhaps by starting smaller groups to
address specific constraints that can then grow steadily to become formal FOs over
time, poor and marginalized groups can still benefit in the future. However, enabling
these groups to benefit from commercially oriented FOs still remains a challenge and
will need to be carefully addressed through targeting and tailoring of interventions to
meet the needs of these groups.
However, in contexts where there are minimum levels
of market development
with growth prospects, where there are small-scale farmers
that have the potential
to produce some surplus for the market and where there is a suitable institutional
and
enabling environment, FOs can be an effective way of contributing to poverty
alleviation through a wide range of direct benefits for members (e.g. increased access to
input and output markets and services, increased bargaining power, lower costs due to
economies of scale, and increased voice and empowerment). Support organizations can
maximize these direct benefits by encouraging poorer farmers and other marginalized
groups to join FOs and providing them with more targeted capacity building, training
and support to enable them to realize their potential to contribute to and take part in
FO activities.
Poorer and subsistence farmers may also be able to benefit indirectly through FO
development, even if they are not members, by taking advantage of FO services that
may be offered to non-members through certain spillover
effects such as increased
access to knowledge and technology, through community
development activities
supported by FOs, and ultimately through the opportunities that result from
FO-driven local economic growth such
as increased local employment, demand for
labour and increased levels of service provision. These all have the potential to directly
benefit poorer farmers, and thus FOs can be an extremely important mechanism for
pro-poor development and poverty alleviation.
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