Date post: | 05-Dec-2014 |
Category: |
Presentations & Public Speaking |
Upload: | slavb |
View: | 274 times |
Download: | 0 times |
Transforming Institutions: the Case of IS Innovation for Agriculture
Advisory Services in Ghana
Mira Slavova11 January 2014
AFAM 2014, Gaborone, Botswana
Agriculture Background
• In Ghana, productivity gap remains considerable (Gollin et al., 2012; Nin-Pratt et al., 2009).
• Foundation for economic growth• Policies geared towards strengthening demand-drive,
markets• Agriculture advisory services (Christoplos, 2009): aim to
provide understanding of improved practice and equitable inclusion in value chains
• Traditionally: low-skill, labor intensive• Increasingly: information and knowledge intensive
Low-tech (Traditional AgricProduction Methods)
High-tech(Certified inputs, GM, Bio-tech)
PerishablesFruit and Vegetables
StaplesGrains
Information intensity matrix (Porter and Millar 1985)
Information intensity of value chain
Information content of product
Competitive Advantage
IS Innovation“Throughout this paper I use the term ‘IS innovation’ to refer to the
development and implementation of ICT systems and concomitant organizational change. That IS implementation comprises technology development and organizational change does not require explanation for the readers of an IS journal. But it is, perhaps, somewhat unusual in the IS literature to see such socio-technical change as ‘innovation’. I chose this term to convey the notion of novelty and open-endedness of the effort and experience of IS implementation and of the associated changes in the hosting organization and beyond it. Even if the technologies implemented in an IS project are common and widespread, the local IS implementation experience constitutes an innovation for the organization undertaking it and may well constitute innovation for its socio-economic context.”
(Avgerou 2008)
Transformation Discourse
• Development and use of IS as embedded within local social practices, economic relations and power balances
• IS interventions as transformative, occurring on the path towards deep socio-economic change and development.
• Social structures are changeable through IS.• (Avgerou 2008)
Research Approach
• Organizational fields in the agriculture sector– Horizontal: farmer-based organizations (FBOs)
(Francesconi 2010) • Increased efficiency• Leveraging social capital
– Vertical: input importers and distributors, value-adding activities, output aggregators, processors, traders, exporters
• Complexity
Research Question
• What are the dynamics of institutional change in Ghanaian agriculture triggered by IS innovation?– Identify constraining and contributing factors– Consider institutional plasticity
Institutional Carriers
Evolution of Innovation
Source: (J. Ferguson and Cummings 2008)
Qualitative SampleFirst generation Second generation Third generation
Organizations GIFEC (1 interview + secondary documents), Telco Regulator (1 interview), GAINS (1 interview + secondary documents), Esoko- SEND Foundation (2 interviews, 2 FDGs), Millennium Villages (2 FDGs, 1 interview), Manobi (seminar), Reuters Market Light (seminar)
Esoko (1 interview, secondary documents, 2 annual conference participations, continuous liaison), ACDI-VOCA (2 interviews), AFRRI (1 interview), Radio Ada (1 interview), SIMLI Radio (1interview, 1 FGD), Classic FM (1interview), GSMA (participation and participant observation)
Literacy bridge (2 seminars, secondary documents, liaison)Grameen Foundation (workshop participation), Microsoft India (seminar)
6 interviews, 4 FDGs, 2 events, secondary documents
7 interviews, 1 FDG, 2 events, practice participation
2 events, secondary documents, practice participation
Findings
• Rural access to ICTs, organizing information, preparing content, basic use of existing resources. Information ‘push’, access/ delivery: AGRINET (AsSSIP), CICs (GIFEC), CTA Q&A (GAINS), Esoko SMS Price Alerts (ECAMIC).– Symbolic
• Increased but limited interaction. Multimedia. Information modifies action: Esoko Scout, Radio-SMS GH.– Single loop learning; improved routines
• Information and knowledge sharing: Talking Book, CKW.– Double loop learning. Correction of underlying norms and objectives
• (Argyris and Schön 1978)
First generation Second generation Third generationInstitutional pillar:
Regulatory Normative Cultural-cognitive
Constraining and contributing factors:
Infrastructure Organizational norms and processes
Collaboration networks, traditional oral culture, rural social structures (oboa, susu)
IS innovation enables:
New information and knowledge delivery channels. Symbolic systems.
Information collection and knowledge exchange. Single-loop learning. Routines.
Information and knowledge sharing. Double-loop learning. Relational systems.
Technologies Infrastructure. Databases. Clearing houses
Technology platforms Social media spaces
Sample IS Artefacts
GIFEC CICs, GAINS Q&A,
Esoko SMS Market Alerts, Esoko Price Requests, Manobi, Reuters Market Light
Esoko ScoutEsoko SMS Push SMS GHAFRRI participatory radio programmingmFarmer
Voice-based social forumsTalking bookGrameen CKW
Findings
Discussion: IS innovation in Ghana
Information and knowledge
delivery
Info/ knowledge exchanges
within agric processes
Info/ knowledge sharing and
organizational learning
Rural radio
Mobile phone