ZEF Research Projects
Keywords
Science-Policy-Practice Interface (SPPI); Nature-based Solutions (NbS); Savannas; Africa; Climate Change; Biodiversity
Countries
Côte d’Ivoire, Kenya, Germany
Summary
Africa’s sustainable development is tremendously challenged by climate change and biodiversity loss. In particular, the vast African savanna systems have largely been converted into managed landscapes, including agricultural and settlement areas. Savannas are very rich in biodiversity and provide indispensable ecosystem services. At the same time, savannas are the “breadbasket” of the continent providing 70% of Africa's cropland, 66% of cereal production and 80% of livestock farming. One of the greatest future challenges in savanna areas will be to adapt to the ever- changing environmental conditions, to conserve their biodiversity, maintain ecosystem functionality and ecosystem service provision, and concurrently provide food for the local population.
The African Climate and Environment Centre - Future African Savannas (AFAS) which is one of the global Centres of German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) aims to build the critical mass and expertise to tackle these challenges, leveraging on working in the unique SPPI (Science Policy Practice Interface) space, adopting an inter- and transdisciplinary education and research approach with strong digital teaching, learning and research components, capacity development for the implementation of concepts and technologies as drivers of transformative change for the conservation and sustainable use of the savanna ecosystem following the Nature-based Solutions (NbS) approach. Indigenous and local knowledge combined with innovative new approaches based on research represent a great potential for sustainable development and achieving the SDGs in the region.
Methodology
AFAS aims to build capacity of young African scholars through a post-graduate program with masters and doctoral students who undertake an interdisciplinary study program with a curriculum that is co-developed together with stakeholders. The students and senior researchers undertake research on climate change adaptation and biodiversity conservation in the African Savannas. The students also engage in international exchange programs and internships. AFAS is a transdisciplinary project that works with stakeholders in the Science, Policy and Practice Interface.
Main Cooperation Partners
The Center for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn, Germany
The Institute for Climate Change and Adaptation (ICCA), University of Nairobi, Kenya
The African Center of Excellence on Climate Change, Biodiversity and Sustainable Agriculture (CEA-CCBAD), Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire
The Global South Studies Center (GSSC), University of Cologne, Germany
Main Funding Partners
The German Federal Foreign Office
Duration of the Project
5 years (2021-2025)
Project Homepage
https://www.afas.africa/
Team
Prof. Dr. Christian Borgemeister (ZEF, University of Bonn)
Prof. Dr. Michael Bollig (GSSC, University of Cologne)
Prof. Dr. Daniel Olago (ICCA, University of Nairobi)
Prof. Dr. Souleymane Konaté
Assoc. Prof. Dr. N'golo A. Koné
Dr. Juliet Wanjiku Kamau ZEF, University of Bonn)
Dr. Jan Henning Sommer (ZEF, University of Bonn)
Dr. Gerda Kuiper (GSSC, University of Cologne)
Ms. Lewnorah Ayieta (ICCA, University of Nairobi)
Ms. Angelika Mikusz
Ms. Marie Thomalla Arellano
Ms. Bárbara Meraz
Contact
Dr. Juliet Wanjiku Kamau, Phone.: +49-228-73-1838
Keywords
agrifood systems, food systems transformation, food environments, climate change adaptation, resilience, nutrition, governance systems, public policy, policy analysis
Countries
Burkina Faso, Cameroon, India, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Togo, Zambia
Summary
The Agrifood Systems-Transformative Research and Policy program at the Center for Development Research was initiated in November 2023 and will be implemented over a period of 3.5 years.
The program will strengthen the capacity and knowledge of program partner countries to craft and implement effective policies by providing the research and analytical support to develop evidence-based pathways and policies for a sustainable transformation of agrifood systems. The program will also facilitate peer-to-peer exchange and learning events (at the country and regional levels as well as at global fora) for the development of evidence-based sustainability- and resilience-enhancing policies and strategies. Finally, the program will address questions about governance structures, multisectoral and multistakeholder coordination mechanisms that are reflective of the interlinked challenges countries face, and support the development of metrics to better measure and evaluate the impact of interventions and policy structures.
Activities include research and technical support to partner countries in identifying synergies between food, agricultural and social development, nutrition, climate change, biodiversity protection, and environmental health within the broader framework of strengthening the resilience and sustainability of agrifood systems and agrifood systems transformation. The program will identify “low-hanging fruits” in partner countries as possible entry points for targeted interventions to enable evidence-based policy design and implementation. These research activities will be complemented by contributions to peer-to-peer exchange and learning events aimed at discussing what type of interventions may work or have worked already and could be replicated and brought to scale in order to avoid costly “failed experiments”. The research will also identify and highlight possible synergies and tradeoffs of policy interventions with respect to multiple sustainability dimensions (e.g., income, nutrition, gender, climate, biodiversity, etc.).
The program provides technical support to three GIZ programs: the global program on the transformation of food systems (Globalvorhaben Transformation der Ernährungssysteme), the global program on sustainable agrifood systems and policies (Globalvorhaben Nachhaltige Agrarsysteme und Agrarpolitik) and Knowledge for Nutrition (K4N). It will be implemented in the following countries*: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, India, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Togo, and Zambia.
*Final list of countries tbc
Main Cooperation Partners
Country partners (research, policy), GIZ, BMZ
Main Funding Partners
GIZ
Duration of the Project
November 2023 – April 2027
Team
Dr. Katrin Glatzel
Prof. Matin Qaim
Contact
Dr. Katrin Glatzel, Phone.: +49-228-73-1884
Keywords
Food price volatility, speculation, risk management, inventories, price transmission
Countries
World (in particular grain producing countries) and selected developing countries (Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, India and Indonesia) as well as China
Summary
The overall objectives of the project are the investigation of the drivers and causes of price volatility, the transmission to regional, national and micro-level, and the impact on poor people (farmers and consumers). In particular, regulatory instruments such as public reserves, policies targeting on trade or private storage, and safety nets and other coping mechanisms are explored. Another main goal is the development of an early warning system for food insecurity based on research outcomes.
Methodology
Short-term statistical modeling and early-warning systems; Econometric analysis and field research; Partial equilibrium modeling
Main Cooperation Partners
https://www.zef.de/project-homepages/volatility/template-following/volatility/partners-and-cooperations.html
Main Funding Partners
- BMZ (Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development): Phase 1 & 2
- Union Investment: Phase 1
- Bayer Crop Science: Phase 1
Duration of the Project
Aug 2011 – Dec 2014: Volatility in Commodity Markets, Trade Policy and the Poor (Phase 1)
Apr 2015 – Dec 2021: Analysis and Implementation of Measures to Reduce Price Volatility in National and International Markets for Improved Food Security in Developing Countries (Phase 2)
Jan 2022 – Dec 2024: Extension of Phase 2
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/volatility.html
Team
Prof. Dr. Joachim von Braun
Dr. Lukas Kornher (project coordinator)
Dr. Bernadina Algieri
Dr. Annet Adong
Dr. Muhammed Usman
Dr. Sundus Saleemi
Dr. Gazali Issahaku
Contact
Dr. Lukas Kornher. Phone.: +49-228-73-6188
Keywords
Biodiversity, Land Use, Climate change, Arboviruses, Emerging Infectious Diseases
Countries
Germany and Uganda
Summary
In the ArboEmerge project we assess the current and future risk of infectious zoonotic diseases under future ecological, climate and socio-economic change in Uganda. In particular, we explore spill over infections in vector species (e.g. mosquitoes, rodents and ticks), livestock and humans to identify drivers of emerging arboviral diseases and propose preventive policies.
Methodology
Applying an inter-disciplinary approach, samples from mosquitoes, livestock, and humans in three less disturbed ecosystems (Bwindi Impenetrable, Queen Elizabeth, and Murchison National Parks) and adjacent disturbed urban areas (Kasese and Arua Cities) will undergo screening for pre-epidemic arboviruses. Identified arboviruses will undergo molecular and phenotypic characterization, and phylogenetic analysis to describe their intra- and inter-host genetic diversity. Using phylogeographic analyses, we will reconstruct the virus spatial movement and build ecological niche models that assess the influence of different socioeconomic and ecological factors on the risk of virus transmission and disease outbreaks. This will also enable modelling of virus and host distribution as well as infection risk under current and future climatic and land use scenarios. We will also apply Bayesian decision modelling approaches to assess the effectiveness of policy interventions in reducing the risk of outbreaks under current and future climatic and land use scenarios.
Main Cooperation Partners
University of Bonn, ZEF
Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Makerere University, Uganda
Uganda Virus Research Institute
Main Funding Partners
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
Duration of the Project
36 months
Team
Jun.-Prof. Lisa Biber-Freudenberger, ZEF
Prof. Dr. Sandra Junglen, Berlin
Dr. Julius Lutwama, Uganda
Dr. Anthony M. Nsubuga, Uganda
Dr. Innocent B. Rwego, Uganda
Erick B. Kigai, Uganda
Peter Z. Sabakaki, Uganda
Selina Graf, Berlin
Teddy A. Tindyebwa, Uganda
Maureen Nabatanzi, ZEF
Keywords
Nature-based Solutions; biodiversity-climate synergies; Social dimension; participatory processes: Transdisciplinarity
Countries
Austria, Colombia, Côte d'Ivoire and Kenya, Lebanon
Summary
The BioClimSocial project is intended to highlight the significance of the social dimension in the context of researching, planning and implementing measures for biodiversity and climate at the local (or regional) level.
The ‘social dimension’ encompasses the views, needs and experiences of a diversity of actors/stakeholders across civil society, industry and academia, as well as relationships between these actors/stakeholders (power relations, institutional arrangements, governance systems). The project is to complement the existing knowledge and tools in the respective field by putting emphasis on exploring the social dimension in the applied research in climate- biodiversity relevant NbS.
The BioClimSociale project will analyse the social dimension of synergistic climate-biodiversity NbS through two interlinking research packages.
Work Package 1 involves the undertaking of data collection on the features of the social dimension as an integral part of NbS research and implementation. The data set will be drawn from those NbS researchers who are applying transdisciplinary research. A mixed methodology analysis of data via surveys and interviews from this database of global NbS study cases will encompass NbS in four sectors: agroforestry, coastal, mountainous and urban regions. The questionnaire that will form the survey will be formulated in part, by data derived from an academic and grey literature review on NbS case studies that fit the criteria (climate-biodiversity synergy and with a strong focus on the social dimension), where themes will be identified and coded in order to be integrated into the questionnaire.
Furthermore, data derived from Work Package 2 - constituting our four NbS case study partners will also contribute to the forthcoming survey and in depth interview questions. The resultant data will contribute directly to both the NbS Guideline and a prospective scientific co-authored publication. The four NbS case study partners, along with our selected Project Advisory Board of experts, will be part of the iterative process of knowledge co-production through transdisciplinarity in order to produce the said outputs of the Guideline and the publication.
Work Package 3 and 4 constitute capacity building and project management activities, both of which are designed to support the ongoing and potentially future research activities for our case study partners at the biodiversity-climate interface in practice.
Specific objectives of the project are:
To undertake transdisciplinary research that will lead to the development of a guideline. The purpose of this Guideline is to provide a theoretical underpinning as well as practical recommendations for considering the social dimension in NbS for climate and biodiversity.
To collaborate with four, active global NbS case studies to enrich the Guidelines with “good practice” examples and lessons learnt of the four case studies which explore experiences made by applied and application-oriented projects on: restoring mangroves in Colombia; urban greening in Lebanon; agroforestry practices in Côte d'Ivoire and Kenya; and biodiversity-climate synergies in the rural mountainous areas of Austria.
To foster capacity building for future collaboration and potential research that expands on the current scientific foci.
Methodology
Mixed methodology:
- Questionnaires
- In-depth interviews with academics in the field of Nature-based Solutions
- Online and in-person workshops
- Qualitative and quantitative analyses
Main Cooperation Partners
African Climate and Environment Centre - Future African Savannas (AFAS), Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Prof. Dr N'Golo A. Kone, Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny - NbS case study partner
Climate Research Center, Nature Park Ötscher Tormäuer, Austria, Florian Schublach, Katja Weirer, Dr Günther Schreder, Danube University Krems - NbS case study partner
sea4soCiety - Increasing the carbon storage potential of coastal ecosystems rich in vegetation; Colombia, Malaysia, Prof. Dr Martin Zimmer; Prof. Dr Esteban Zarza Gonzalez, Universidad del Sinu and Prof Dr. José Ernesto Mancera Pineda, Universidad Nacional de Colombia (Exact Partner TBD) - NbS case study partner
Urban Greening, Department of Landscape Design and Ecosystem Management, Beirut, Lebanon, Prof. Salma N. Talhouk, American University of Beirut - NbS case study partner
Main Funding Partners
Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (BfN), with funds of the German Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV)
Project Advisory Group (PAG)
Dr. Lalisa Duguma (Agroforestry)
Prof. Niki Frantzeskaki (Cities)
Dr. Boniface Kiteme (Water Resources)
Dr. Florencia Zapata (Mountainous regions)
Duration of the Project
Spring 2023 - November 2025
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/bioclimsocial
Team
Jun.-Prof. Lisa Biber-Freudenberger (ZEF)
Vanessa Haines-Matos (ZEF)
Keywords
Capacity development, Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
Countries
Overall: 38+ countries (West, East and Central Africa). Core countries (8): Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Ethiopia, Gabon, Madagascar, Sierra Leone
Summary
CABES – Capacity Development for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Experts (www.cabes.online) aims to develop and strengthen the capacity of professionals in biodiversity-related fields in West, Central, and East Africa to engage in the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES, www.ipbes.net). Goal one is to inform national decision-making processes amongst multiple stakeholder groups including researchers, practitioners from the public and private sectors, as well as NGOs, indigenous & local knowledge (ILK) holders, women, and IPBES national focal points. Goal two is to establish a network of science-policy platforms to contribute to the implementation of the IPBES work programmes at national, sub-regional and regional level. Goal three is to train early-career scientists, researchers, and facilitators to manage science-policy interfaces (SPIs). Finally, CABES will develop capacities to support the implementation of political decisions for the management and sustainable use of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services/Nature’s Contributions to People (BES/NCP).
Methodology
CABES will develop and strengthen capacity in West, Central, and East Africa to engage in IPBES through different capacity building initiatives and setting up of science-policy platforms across geographic scales, including: (i) A capacity development programme and platform targeted at professionals; (ii) Education & capacity development programme through university course works targeting early-career professional; (iii) the establishment and/or strengthening of National platforms on biodiversity & Ecosystem Services that brings together national experts to identify and address policy gaps; and (iv) A “network of platforms” that connects science-policy platforms at sub-regional, regional scale and beyond to mainstream contributions to the IPBES work programme and its uptake, as well as to foster knowledge exchanges & south-south collaboration.
Main Cooperation Partners
- CoKnow Consulting, Germany
- UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC), United Kingdom,
- West African Science Service Centre on Climate Change & Adapted Land Use (WASCAL), Burkina Faso.
- African Center of Excellence on Climate Change, Biodiversity and Sustainable Agriculture (CEA-CCBAD), Université Félix Houphouët Boigny (UFHB), Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire
- Horn of Africa Regional Environment Center and Network (HoAREC), Ethiopia
- Faculty of Agronomic Sciences of the Université de Lubumbashi (FSA-UNILU), Democratic Republic of Congo
Main Funding Partners
The International Climate Initiative (IKI) of the German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV).
Duration of the Project
15.02.2022 – 31.01.2030
Project Homepage
https://www.cabes.online/
Team
Jan Henning Sommer
Isimemen Osemwegie
Contact
Dr. Jan Henning Sommer, Phone.: +49-228-73-1725
Keywords
Sustainable health, adolescents, education, nutrition
Countries
Tanzania, Kenya, Burkina Faso
Summary
Changemaker addresses the increasing epidemic of adolescent obesity in urban sub-Saharan Africa. The project aims at co-designing, implementing, and evaluating the effects and the processes of a comprehensive sustainable health intervention in three exemplary sites: Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso; Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; Kisumu, Kenya. Ina Danquah and her team are coordinating this project together with Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, and are responsible for the impact evaluation.
Methodology
The sustainable health intervention comprises of four evidence-based strategies: 1) urban farming in schools with satellite farms and organic waste composting, 2) sustainable health modules for classrooms, 3) linking to healthcare workers through health talks using motivational interviewing techniques, and 4) WHO Best Buys: Mass media campaign. Three cluster-RCTs in secondary schools, within the framework of urban Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems, implementation and process evaluation and cost-effective evaluation.
Main Cooperation Partners
Prof. Kristi Sydney-Annerstedt, Karolinska Institutet (KI), Stockholm, Sweden
Dr. Ali Sié, Centre de Recherche en Santé de Nouna (CRSN), Nouna, Burkina Faso
Dr. Abdramane Soura, Institute Supérieure des Sciences de la Population, University of Ouagadougou (ISSP), Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
Prof. Pilvikki Absetz, Tampere University (TAU), Tampere, Finnland
Prof. Marleen Temmerman, Aga Khan University (AKU), Nairobi, Kenya
Sharon Chacha, Food Security for Peace and Nutrition (FSPN), Kenya
Susan Adhiambo, Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries (DALF), Kisumu, Kenya
Dr. Alice Ojwang Achieng, The Technical University of Kenya (TUK), Nairobi, Kenya
Prof. Mary Mwanyika Sando, Africa Academy for Public Health (AAPH), Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Prof. Bruno Sunguya, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS), Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Prof. Wafaie Fawzi, Harvard Global Research and Support Services Inc. (Harvard), Boston, USA
Main Funding Partners
European Commission: Horizon Europe
HORIZON-HLTH-2023-DISEASE-03-03
Duration of the Project
4 years (01 Jan 2024 – 31 Dec 2027)
Project Homepage
https://changemaker.ki.se/
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Dr. Raissa Sorgho
Grace Wothaya Kihagi (candidate PhD)
Keywords
Climate change adaptation, fishing, subsistence farming, women, nutrition, health
Countries
Ghana
Summary
Individual and community-initiated climate change adaptation responses are promoted globally, but among vulnerable populations, evidence regarding their availability, implementation and impact on mediating climatic shocks in developing countries is scanty. We aim to identify the adaptation and coping mechanisms adopted by rural smallholder female farmers residing along the Ghana Volta lake and the mitigate effects on livelihoods, household food security and nutritional status. A framework showing the climate adaption strategies and the linkage with household livelihoods, food security and nutritional status will be developed and used to inform a future intervention study. An immediate step will be advocacy program to encourage policy revision and practical actions to support smallholder framers to be climate-sensitive and more climate-adaptive.
Methodology
In this triangulated sequential explanatory mixed-methods study, we shall interview 442 adult females engaged in predominant crop and fish farming in rural communities along the Volta Lake using the climate coping and adaptation strategies assessment tool. The quantitative data in the first sequel will measuring indices that quantifies actual and perceived climate risk vulnerability, adaptation strategies and the intensity of impact of climatic hazards on family income, food stocks and undernutrition. Participants found to adapt very positively or negatively to agriculture climatic stress will be interviewed in the qualitative phase to understand in-depth the triggers of the adaptive or maladaptive coping skills. The responses shall be rated using Likert-type questions and the scores weighted to derive patterns using principal component analysis and other data-tailored regression models and triangulated with the textual data to generate a linkage of the adaptive capacity. At the end of the 12-month project period, we expect to quantify and link the impacts of climate adaptation strategies on mediating the livelihoods and nutritional stocks to inform evidence-based policy and practical actions particularly for smallholder farmers and other vulnerable populations.
Main Cooperation Partners
Dr. Faith Agbozo, University of Health and Allied Sciences (UHAS), Ho, Ghana
Main Funding Partners
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
Duration of the Project
2 years (01 Mar 2022 – 28 Feb 2023)
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Marian Abrafi Osei (candidate PhD)
Keywords
Climate change adaptation, undernutrition, rural sub-Saharan Africa, children
Countries
Kenya, Burkina Faso
Summary
This project is part of the larger Research Unit “Climate Change and Health in sub-Saharan Africa”, for which Ina Danquah serves as the spokesperson. This subproject addresses the forecasted agricultural losses based on the current CO2 emissions until 2050 and their consequences for the nutritional status of children under-5 years of age living in two selected regions of sub-Saharan Africa. The subproject determines the potential of an integrated agriculture and nutrition program as an adaptation strategy to improve the children’s nutritional status for climate-sensitive nutrients in rural Burkina Faso and Kenya, where climate change will impact agriculture most strongly. The intervention focuses on bio-diversification of subsistence farming by home gardens, and is accompanied by nutrition and health counselling using the 7 Essential Nutrition Action messages by the World Health Organization. For sub-Saharan Africa, bio-diversification constitutes one of the most promising and practicable adaptation strategies for CO2-dependent agricultural losses, for both, the absolute amounts of crops and for the plant contents of protein, iron and zinc. As a novelty, P2 identifies the controversially discussed, potential effects of such an agriculture and nutrition program on the risk of clinical malaria in children under-5 years of age.
Methodology
In the first project phase, the adaptation program was tailored to the needs of the Kenyan region in collaboration with Siaya County Ministries of Health and Agriculture and the non-governmental organization Centre for African Bio-Entrepreneurship (CABE). We determined the horticultural crops to be cultivated and the practicability and the acceptability of the program. A cluster-randomized controlled trial with 2 x 600 households was implemented. We recruited households with children at the age of complementary feed introduction (6-24 months) and followed them up for 1 year. In phase 2 of the project, we will establish the effects of the intervention program on changes in dietary habits, the status of climate-sensitive nutrients, and the risk of clinical malaria among the children after 2 years. We will define the necessary investments to scale-up such intervention programs to the provincial, state, and national levels. Lastly, we will generate adaptation-response functions characterizing the effects of the agricultural bio-diversification and nutrition counselling program under future climate scenarios.
Main Cooperation Partners
- Dr. Erick Muok and Dr. Stephen Munga, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)-Kisumu, Center for Global Health Research (CGHR), Kisumu, Kenya
- Dr. Ali Sié, Centre de Recherche en Santé de Nouna (CRSN), Nouna, Burkina Faso
- Prof. Till Bärnighausen, Prof. Manuela De Allegri, Prof. Joacim Rocklöv, Dr. Sandra Barteit, Dr. Aditi Bunker, Heidelberg Institute for Global Health (HIGH), Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany
- Prof. Harald Grethe, International Agricultural Trade and Development, Humboldt University Berlin (HUB), Berlin, Germany
- PD Dr. Martina Maggioni, Institute for Physiology, Charité – Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany
- Prof. Christoph Gornott, Prof. Hermann Lotze-Campen, Dr. Katja Frieler, Dr. Fred Hattermann, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Potsdam, Germany
- Prof. Penelopé Vounatsu, Swiss Tropical and Health Institute (Swiss TPH), Basel, Switzerland
- Prof. Harald Kunstmann, Karlsruhe Institute for Technology (KIT), Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
Main Funding Partners
German Research Foundation (DFG) – FOR2936 Climate Change and Health in sub-Saharan Africa (Kenya)
Robert Bosch Foundation (RBS) – Robert Junior Professorship 2019 (Burkina Faso)
Further information
The project:
Full Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCaPuISjx4w
Short Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3SQd2QQKrM
The principal investigator: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFJJFP1RqXg
Publications
- Hansen L-S, Wothaya Kihagi G, Agure E, Muok EMO, Mank I, Danquah I, Sorgho R. Sustainable home gardens in Western Kenya: A qualitative study for co-designing nutrition-sensitive interventions. J Rural Studies. 2023 Sep 18;103:103132. doi:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2023.103132
- Beloconi A, Nyawanda BO, Bigogo G, Khagayi S, Obor D, Danquah I, Kariuki S, Munga S, Vounatsou P.
Malaria, climate variability, and interventions: modelling transmission dynamics. Sci Rep. 2023 May 5;13(1):7367. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-33868-8. - Mank I, Sorgho R, Zerbo F, Kagoné M, Coulibaly B, Oguso J, Mbata M, Khagayi S, Muok EMO, Sié A, Danquah I. ALIMUS-We are feeding! Study protocol of a multi-center, cluster-randomized controlled trial on the effects of a home garden and nutrition counseling intervention to reduce child undernutrition in rural Burkina Faso and Kenya. Trials. 2022 Jun 1;23(1):449.
- Yeboah E, Kuunibe N, Mank I, Parisi D, Bonnet E, Lohmann J, Hamadou S, Picbougoum BW, Belesova K, Sauerborn R, Bärnighausen T, Danquah I, De Allegri M. Every drop matters: Combining population-based and satellite data to investigate the link between lifetime rainfall exposure and chronic undernutrition in children under five years in rural Burkina Faso. Environ Res Letters. 2022 Apr;17(5):054027
- Hansen L-S; Sorgho R; Mank I; Schwerdtle P N; Agure E, Bärnighausen T, Danquah I. Home gardening in sub-Saharan Africa: A scoping review on practices and nutrition outcomes in rural Burkina Faso and Kenya. Food and Energy Security. 2022;00:e388.
- Gottlieb-Stroh T, Souares A, Bärnighausen T, Sié A, Zabre SP, Danquah I. Seasonal and socio-demographic patterns of self-reporting major disease groups in north-west Burkina Faso: an analysis of the Nouna Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) data. BMC Public Health. 2021 Jun 9;21(1):1101.
- Mank I, Vandormael A, Traoré I, Ouédraogo WA, Sauerborn R, Danquah I. Dietary habits associated with growth development of children aged < 5 years in the Nouna Health and Demographic Surveillance System, Burkina Faso. Nutr J. 2020 Aug 9;19(1):81.
- Yeboah E, Bunker A, Dambach P, Mank I, Sorgho R, Sié A, Munga S, Bärnighausen T and Danquah I (2021). Transformative Adaptations for Health Impacts of Climate Change in Burkina Faso and Kenya. African Handbook of Climate Change Adaptation; 2485-2500.
Duration of the Project
2 phases of each 3 years (01 Jan 2020 – 31 Dec 2025)
Project Homepage
https://cch-africa.de/
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Anaïs Gonnet (project coordinator)
Erick Agure (candidate PhD)
Grace Wothaya Kihagi (candidate PhD)
Sayouba Dianda (candidate PhD)
Fanta Zerbo (candidate PhD)
Katharina Westphal (candidate Dr. med.)
Keywords
Teaching exchange and student exchange
Countries
Japan, Germany
Summary
The longstanding collaboration between the Center for Development Research (ZEF) and the University of Tokyo grows with the inclusion of the Graduate School of Frontier Science (GSFS) in addition to the International Program in Agricultural Development Studies (IPADS). Together, they are forging new pathways in sustainable development and addressing global challenges such as hunger, malnutrition, poverty, inequality, and the sustainable management of common resources. With interdisciplinary perspectives, all three institutes strive to create a positive impact.
The partnership, initiated in 2016 by Prof. Kensuke Okada from the University of Tokyo and Prof. Dr. Christian Borgemeister, Dr. Manfred Denich, and Dr. Günther Manske from ZEF, has evolved into a thriving collaboration. Under the management of Dr. Silke Tönsjost and Max Voit from the Bonn International Graduate School for Development Research (BIGS-DR) at ZEF, along with Dr. Juliet Kamau from ZEF, the project starts a new chapter of student exchange and knowledge exchange. All three institutes are committed to fostering academic excellence and empowering future decision-makers through science-based approaches to tackling complex global challenges.
Methodology
Teaching exchange, student exchange, excursions, and joint online-seminars.
Main Cooperation Partners
International Program in Agricultural Development Studies (IPADS) / University of Tokyo
Graduate Program in Sustainability Science - Global Leadership Initiative (GPSS-GLI) / University of Tokyo
Main Funding Partners
University of Tokyo and University of Bonn
Further information
“Local communities matter”. Interview with Professor Hiroe Ishihara of University of Tokyo
Duration of the Project
Since 2016
Team
Prof. Dr. Christian Borgemeister (ZEF)
Dr. Juliet Kamau (ZEF)
Prof. Dr. Mitsuo Yamamoto (IPADS)
Prof. Dr. Hiroe Ishihara (GPSS-GLI)
Dr. Silke Tönsjost (ZEF)
Max Voit (ZEF)
Contact
Dr. Silke Tönsjost, Phone.: +49-228-73-1794
Keywords
Doctoral Studies Support Program, Colombia, ZEF, DAAD, SDGs
Countries
Colombia, Germany
Summary
This bilateral doctoral studies support program on „Environmental peace building and development in Colombia“ of ZEF at the University of Bonn and the Universidad Nacional, Bogotá, Instituto de Estudios Ambientales (IDEA), will look at the nexus of natural resources, governance and conflict in Colombia. We will use innovative and integrative concepts, methods and instruments to explore interdependencies. The joint German-Colombian production of knowledge based on interdisciplinary exposure and integrative measures is the more important in a country in which the recently signed peace appraisal will be put to test by the way the society finds solutions for pressing issues related to conflictive extractive activities, environmental protection and not least the participation and inclusion of the population in decision making processes to reduce environmental conflicts.
Rights and access to natural resources
Territorial rights and access to natural resources are key elements to understand long-standing political and social conflicts in the world. In Latin America, their role is enhanced by many interconnected factors such as divergent world views on land and territory and consequential competing interests. This includes for example concepts of land and nature as livelihood with symbolic meaning vs. the notion of land and its resources as a commodity. Such factors are largely responsible for the increasing and unsustainable use of resources and exploitation of natural resources. This can be in the form of more extractive activities such as mining, agro-industries and monocultures with a destructive impact on the environment.
Colombia’s case of conflict
Colombia is a show case of a country in which territorial rights, land use and the extraction of natural resources have been deeply entrenched with diverse forms of violence. The long-lasting armed conflicts starting in the mid1960s between different guerrilla groups such as the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia, today Fuerza Alternativa Revolucionaria del Común) and ELN (Ejercito de Liberación Nacional) on the one hand and the consecutive Colombian governments on the other show the linkages between armed conflict and historically derived inequalities in terms of access to land and territorial distribution. In Colombia, this relation has not only led to the exploitation and destruction of the environment but also to the expropriation of land and displacement of rural population. In fact, Colombia is one of the earth’s five mega-biodiversity centers which makes the country the world‘s core biodiversity region and therefore a hotspot for its commodification.
“Post-conflict” opportunity
Currently, Colombia faces a unique historical challenge with the ‘post-conflict’ (posacuerdo), because the peace agreement with FARC and the peace negotiations with ELN seem to end the armed conflict. But the challenge lies in implementing strategies for a ‘sustainable peace’, which would need to address the unequal distribution of land, the legal pluralistic notions of land, respective claims for territorial rights and the sustainable use of ecosystems and natural resources rather than exploiting them arbitrarily. Nonetheless, the relations between the environment and the armed conflict in Colombia are manifold. Thus, the diverse ecosystems and natural resources may appear as the cause, the victim (deforestation, fumigation), or the beneficiary (through the protection and conservation of contested sites with high biodiversity) of these ongoing conflicts. At the same time, the environment and the way territory is distributed and used is at the core of any long lasting solution to the complex conflict.
Interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary project approach
This project needs and chose an interdisciplinary approach to deal with the complex setting. The different relations between the environment and the conflict in Colombia, the role land and access to natural resources play for the peace building process and how the environment can be protected in the long run while simultaneously balancing the different exploitation interests still need an interdisciplinary scientific exploration . Both the dimension of the destruction of the environment and the development of solutions to use and protect the environment and all the people therein (implementing an institutional set-up for land use planning, developing forms of alternative agricultural production, ecological-organic farming, tourism, etc.) need further analysis in order to fully understand human-nature relationships and the feedback mechanisms of the socio-ecological systems. Whether the commercialization of natural resources can be managed in a sustainable way depends to a large extent on the legal and institutional set-up and the way the affected population is involved in decision-making on strategies to use the common goods and develop the country. The future of peace in Colombia highly depends on sustainable, locally adapted and integrated solutions for land use and access to resources, to which highly qualified scientists can substantially contribute.
Methodology
Development of an Interdisciplinary doctoral program addressing the SDGs
Creation of a research agenda addressing the SDGs
Main Cooperation Partners
Institute for Environmental Studies (IDEA) in Bogotá, Colombia
Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC)
University for Development Studies (UDS) in Ghana
UN System Staff College (UNSSC) - Knowledge Centre for Sustainable Development
Main Funding Partners
BMZ, DAAD
Duration of the Project
until December 2025
Project Homepage
https://dssp-colombia.org/
Team
at ZEF:
Eva Youkhana (project leader)
Dennis Aviles Irahola (coordinator)
Christian Petersheim (financial administration)
Carolina Tobón Ramírez (coordinator)
in Colombia at IDEA:
Tomás León Sicard (project leader)
Laura Calderón (research assistant)
Maria-Fernanda Ronancio Mateus (student assistant)
Juan Manuel Rengifo (data management)
Henry Zarate Ceballos (server management)
Nicolás Pérez (data management)
Keywords
Future making, arboviral diseases, vector ecology and biology
Countries
Kenya, Namibia
Summary
Conservation and intensification are two important pathways of large-scale land-use change in rural Africa. Besides anticipated effects, these top-down strategies of future-making may have unintended side effects on human and animal well-being, in particular because of so- called emerging infectious diseases (EIDs). These pose a serious threat to global health, with more than 70% of them being zoonotic, and among the latter a significant number are arthropod-borne viruses, so-called arboviruses. Arboviruses are particularly sensitive to ecological changes and can easily escape from their natural transmission cycles and adapt to new hosts and geographic regions. Most prominent examples are the epidemics caused by yellow fever, Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika viruses in humans and Rift Valley fever (RVF) in both humans and animals. Land-use changes can have profound effects on biodiversity and EIDs. However, functional linkages between biodiversity and viral pathogens are poorly understood. Moreover, land-use, climatic and demographic changes and rapidly developing livestock markets with concurrent social transformations have a tremendous impact on the livestock sector, in particular on traditional forms of pastoralism in Africa. One of the consequences of these transformations are changing livestock migration routes, which can foster the spread of arboviruses. Yet the impact of ongoing socio-ecological trans- formations in rural Africa on arbovirus transmission cycles remains elusive. This project aims to understand how ecosystem diversity influences vector and virus populations in the light of large-scale land-use changes in rural Africa. Effects of conservation and agricultural intensification (with a particular focus on invasive plant species) on selected arboviruses will be studied in the KAZA and the KRV sites. We will analyze major ecosystem characteristics and assess vector diversity and concomitant arbovirus infections at sites with different duration of land-use changes, the latter especially in KAZA. To identify if simple proxies of diversity can predict patterns of arbovirus abundance or prevalence, we will quantify the taxonomic diversity of vectors, hosts and vegetation. The latter could be important, as there are indications that some vector species favor certain invasive plants. Thus, this project will attempt to quantify the proportion of selected invasive plants, initially in the KRV site, and analyze the impact on vector dynamics and arbovirus prevalence. Close collaboration with projects studying agricultural futures (A03) and conservation areas (A04), ecosystem diversity and services (A01), the challenges of invasive species (B01), and the economic and energy transformations (C02) to name a few will enable a broad and long-term understanding on how such socio-ecological changes will affect arboviral diseases at the KAZA and KRV sites. Regarding the bridging concepts of the collaborative research cluster (CRC), our research will investigate how socio-ecological transformations and land-use changes in the context of future making will lead to shifting boundaries of EIDs and the vectors that are responsible for their transmission. Long-term studies within the framework of the CRC will enable us to understand the dynamics of vector-born infectious diseases and how they affect and potentially disrupt future-making across Africa.
Methodology
The project partners will also aim to develop viable insect rearing and harvesting techniques, assess the nutritional attributes of the insects (while taking into account the unique needs of women, girls and infants), identify the biosafety risks along the value chain, and build capacity for research on edible insects in the regions. Considering the key roles already played by women in the edible insect sector, the research will endeavour to create low-input insect technologies to support their participation along the value chain.
Main Cooperation Partners
National University of Namibia
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
Main Funding Partners
German Research Council (DFG)
Duration of the Project
2018 - 2021 (first phase)
2022 - 2026 (second phase)
Project Homepage
https://www.crc228.de
Team
Prof. Dr. Sandra Junglen – Project PI at Charité
Prof. Dr. Christian Borgemeister – Project PI at ZEF
Prof. Dr. Eric Fèvre – partner at ILRI/ University of Liverpool
Dr. Tatenda Chiuya – ZEF postdoc, based at ILRI
Contact
Prof. Dr. Christian Borgemeister, Phone.: +49-228-73-1866
Keywords
Roads, Rural areas, political economy, socioecological impacts, Nature Futures Framework
Countries
Kenya and Namibia
Summary
In this project, we assess the role of politics in road network development in Kenya. Specifically, we are interested in understanding if and how electoral motives by incumbents drive road infrastructure distribution.
Secondly, we evaluate the road-induced tradeoffs between socioeconomic development and environmental conservation in the rural areas of Kenya and Namibia.
Methodology
We take an inter- and transdisciplinary approach to achieve the project’s objectives.
First, basing on well-established theory on distributive politics from political science, we evaluate the relationship between politics and road development using geospatial datasets and econometric modeling techniques.
Secondly, we engage various stakeholders especially the rural dwellers in Namibia to develop current and future scenarios of road impacts based on the NFF framework.
Finally, we jointly evaluate the socio economic and environmental impacts due to roads using existing impact evaluation techniques and borrowing from other disciplines including remote sensing and geographic analysis and conservation biology.
Main Cooperation Partners
University of Cologne
Main Funding Partners
German Research Foundation- DFG
Duration of the Project
4 years
Project Homepage
https://crc-trr228.de/a05-future-roads/
Team
Jun. Prof. Lisa Bieber-Freudenberger
Vincent Moseti
Keywords
Migration, malaria, sub-Saharan Africa, modelling
Countries
India, Burkina Faso
Summary
The overarching goal of the project is to develop data-driven mathematical models and frameworks that account for ecological, epidemiological, and demographic principals related to human migration behaviour and spatiotemporal spread of malaria parasites, using mathematical (especially, game theory), statistical, and computational methods. The project aims to delineate the interaction of population dynamics with spatial and demographic structure and apply the models to real disease data (e.g., malaria in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)).
Methodology
We will establish mathematical models and estimate key determinants and parameters that account for human behaviour in migration and malaria endemicity, using disease (malaria) and demographic and socioeconomic database from countries in SSA.
Main Cooperation Partners
Dr. Ali Sié and Dr. Pascal Zabre, Centre de Recherche en Santé de Nouna (CRSN), Nouna, Burkina Faso
Prof. Samit Bhattacharyya, Shiv Nadar Institution of Eminence (SNIoE), Dehli, India
Main Funding Partners
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
Duration of the Project
2 years (01 Sep 2022 – 31 Aug 2024)
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Dr. Pascal Zabre
Keywords
PhD Program, Ghana, Development Studies
Countries
Ghana
Summary
The ZEF-led DAAD Center of Excellence in Ghana
The Ghanaian-German Center for Development Studies (GGCDS) established in 2008 in collaboration with the Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER) at the University of Ghana, aims at training dedicated and innovative future leaders from Ghana and other African countries who commit themselves to the development of their countries and can contribute to the strong partnership between Germany and many African countries. PhD-candidates undergo intense training in interdisciplinary development theory, methodology, and professional skills and conduct research on a range of topics related to the economic, social, and political development of their countries. This research not only directly contributes new insights and knowledge that feed into development processes but also, in addition to their training, equips the students with expertise enabling them to take up responsible positions in universities, government, NGOs, and international organizations after obtaining their PhD. Furthermore, the GGCDS supports academic exchange and capacity building in the form research visits in Germany and international conference participation not only for students, but also for the staff of our collaborating partners.
After a successful evaluation of the GGCDS in 2012/2013, funding for a second project phase until 2018, in which the partnership will be expanded to include the University of Development Studies (UDS) in northern Ghana, has been granted by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) and the German Federal Foreign Office.
Main Cooperation Partners
Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana
Faculty of Planning and Land Management, University of Development Studies (UDS)
Main Funding Partners
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
German Federal Foreign Office
Further information
» Call for application
» Students and their profiles
» PhD course 2014
» Photo gallery
» GGDDS Brochure
» Alumni
» News
» Further information
Duration of the Project
2008 - 2023
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/index.php?id=2546
Team
at ISSER
Prof. Dr. Peter Quartey (ISSER Director)
Dr. Martha Awo (PhD program coordinator)
Contact
Dr. Wolfram Laube, Phone.: +49-228-73-4914
Keywords
Dietary diversity, dietary patterns, climate change, resilience, sub-Saharan Africa
Countries
Ivory Coast, Benin, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Cameroon, Uganda, Kenya
Summary
Various forms of malnutrition, including hunger, micronutrient deficiencies and non-communicable diseases caused by unbalanced nutrition, threaten food security in Africa. The project HealthyDiest4Africa is based on the central hypothesis that diversification of the food system helps to combat all forms of malnutrition while minimizing its environmental footprint. To this aim, we w ill monitor dietary diversity in eight African countries representing different regions, and develop target group-specific metrics to measure the diversity of the food system and its health outcomes. In the HD4A project, Danquah and her team are responsible for mapping and monitoring dietary diversity across 8 countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Methodology
A production-oriented cluster of the project will explore environmentally sustainable options to diversity food production that specifically address the nutritional requirements identified for the target populations. This includes the development of novel and biofortified crop varieties, utilization of orphan crops with high nutritional value, and diversification of cropping systems and food processing technology. We will link these efforts with a consumption-oriented cluster exploring the consumer acceptance, food safety, and nutritional health effects of diet diversification options. The best solutions that contribute to healthy diets via diversification while also promoting environmental health will be up-scaled via a network of food system stakeholders in eight African countries. HealthyDiets4Africa will also devise communication and policy strategies to maximize outreach and impact of diversified food systems. Thereby the project will help to develop safe, healthy and affordable diets by adopting a diversification strategy that will simultaneously reduce the pressure of food production on the environment.
Main Cooperation Partners
Prof. Michael Frei, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen (JLU), Gießen, Germany
Dr. Sali Atanga Ndindeng, AfricaRice (AR), Abidjan, Ivory Coast
Dr. Irmgard Jordan, International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) and Alliance Bioversity, Nairobi, Kenya
Main Funding Partners
European Commission, Horizon Europe
HORIZON-CL6-2022-FARM2FORK-01
Duration of the Project
6 years (01 Jan 2023 – 31 Dec 2028)
Project Homepage
https://www.hd4a.eu
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Mahir Bhatt (candidate PhD)
Rebecca Schindlmayr (candidate Dr. med.)
Keywords
Support of doctoral research on nutrition and food security
Summary
With its program “Hermann Eiselen Ph.D. Research Support Program” the German Foundation fiat panis supports research on food security and rural development in the Global South. This grant provides doctoral students from the Center for Development Research (ZEF) at the University of Bonn with funding for empirical research on food security. Since the fiat panis Foundation began funding the doctoral students in 2011 more than 100 research activities have been funded at ZEF leading to successful dissertations.
Duration of the Project
Since 2011
Project Homepage
http://www.stiftung-fiat-panis.de/en/
Contact
Dr. Silke Tönsjost, Phone.: +49-228-73-1794
Keywords
food security, adaptation to climate change, environmental protection, social learning, gender, implementation research
Countries
The project spans all countries in Sub-Saharan Africa with a focus on West Africa
Summary
INTERFACES is an accompanying project that will support four BMBF-funded regional research and development (R&D) projects in their endeavor to drive change for sustainable land management in Sub-Saharan Africa. It will do so through impact-driven support activities which build on networking for the regional projects, science communication, social learning processes and capacity development, and by complementary transfer analyses that enable or facilitate the implementation as well as improve the relevance and outreach of the regional projects' research-based findings.
Key bottlenecks for better adoption of technical solutions or ideas for better land management include that the proposed solutions may not necessarily match the constraints or meet the priorities of the stakeholders who are supposed to use them, that there is resistance to change due to power structures, value systems, norms and institutions, or that it is unclear how to achieve the desired change because context-specific behavior change management concepts are missing. To achieve changes towards sustainable land management, a fundamental reorganization is needed across technological, economic, political, institutional and social factors, including paradigms, goals and values. Changes must be gender-responsive and socially inclusive, which means that implementation pathways for sustainable land management must be based on thorough gender and power analyses and lead to outcomes that benefit both women and men of different ethnicities, ages, classes, and income levels.
The outputs from INTERFACES are expected to include scientific and non-scientific publications, the promotion of transdisciplinary research and social learning approaches in order to produce research results that are relevant to practice, the strengthening of already existing networks on land management issues and linking them up with different African and international networks to further contribute to the implementation of the R&D results in the area of land management. Finally, INTERFACES will anchor implementation-oriented research in education and training.
Approach:
INTERFACES has four work areas that together strengthen the integration, coherence and reach of the regional projects with regard to sustainable land management:
- Knowledge synthesis through dialogues about future visions and theories of change for sustainable land management - together with the regional projects and actors from science, policy and practice,
- Support of innovation and implementation processes by identifying change strategies to bridge knowledge-behaviour gaps,
- Communication, networking and knowledge management and
- Education and capacity building, e.g. through the integration of teaching content into African and German graduate programs.
The methods and results of the regional projects find their way into the training of project partners and students with regard to the training of future "change agents".
Main Cooperation Partners
Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), Ghana
West African Science Service Centre on Climate Change & Adapted Land Use (WASCAL), Burkina Faso
University of Business and Integrated Development Studies (UBIDS), Ghana
University of Applied Sciences Bonn-Rhein-Sieg (H-BRS), Germany
German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS), Germany
Horticultural Sciences, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation (INRES) University of Bonn, Germany
Main Funding Partners
Federal Ministry for Research and Education (BMBF)
Duration of the Project
01.10.2022 to 30.09.2026
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/interfaces
Team
Dr. Tina Beuchelt
Dr. Hannah Jaenicke
Dr. Peter Asare-Nuamah
Ala Malasheuskaya
Contact
Dr. Tina Beuchelt, Phone.: +49-228-73-4922
Keywords
Labor markets, income diversification, gender, social welfare
Countries
Kenya, Tanzania, Namibia, Zambia
Summary
Households in rural Africa typically have diversified income sources. Beyond own farm production, many also work on other farms as agricultural laborers, have formal or informal employment in other sectors, or pursue self-employed business activities. With rapidly rising population numbers, the diversification of income and employment sources in rural Africa – also beyond the agricultural sector – will likely continue in the coming years and decades. Sufficient generation of decent employment in various rural sectors could contribute to sustainable structural transformation and development, whereas inadequate job availability could perpetuate poverty and natural resource degradation. Hence, studying employment trends and the factors that influence current and future job availability, accessibility, and quality needs to be an integral element of “future-making” research in rural Africa. This project collects and uses data from four Eastern and Southern African countries – Kenya, Tanzania, Namibia, and Zambia – to provide insights under diverse agroecological and socioeconomic conditions. The following research questions are addressed: (1) What income and employment sources do rural households and individuals have, and how are these sources associated with economic and social welfare? (2) To what extent are employment patterns associated with the use of specific agricultural technologies and innovations? (3) What role do rural infrastructure and institutions play? (4) How do labour conditions compare in relevant rural sectors? (5) What are conducive household-level and contextual conditions for sustainable job futures?
Methodology
Together with local partners we collect household- and individual-level data as well as employer data through structured personal interviews. Statistical models are developed and estimated to analyze people’s access to different types of employment, determinants of participation, labor conditions, and effects on income, food security, gender roles, and inequality. Employment trends and their drivers are analyzed with panel data.
Main Cooperation Partners
- University of Bonn
- University of Cologne
- University of Nairobi, Kenya
- Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania
- University of Namibia, Namibia
- University of Zambia, Zambia
Main Funding Partners
German Research Foundation (DFG)
Duration of the Project
2022 - 2025
Project Homepage
https://www.crc228.de/
Team
Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim (project leader)
Dr. Martin Parlasca
Chrispinus Mutsami
Three additional PhD students to be recruited
Contact
Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim, Phone.: +49-228-73-1847
Keywords
Climate change mitigation, health co-benefits, facility-based nutrition intervention, hospitals
Countries
Germany
Summary
The project 'Climate Change mitigation in Hospitals by Optimizing Supply Chains' (KliOL) aims to create a greenhouse gas calculator for hospitals with a special focus on greenhouse gas emissions from supply chains ("Scope 3" emissions) using Heidelberg University Hospital (UKHD) as an example. In parallel, exemplary climate change measures will be implemented at the UKHD and evaluated with regard to their impact on the greenhouse gas balance, financial aspects and possible health effects. Ina Danquah and her team have developed a cafeteria-based sustainable diet intervention and identified the impacts on dietary practices, physical and mental wellbeing, greenhouse gas emissions, and costs of the diet.
Methodology
In this quasi-experiment, plant-based menus and educational material on sustainable diets were provided in the largest cafeteria of a German hospital for 3 months. Regular customers (>1/week) in this cafeteria and in a cafeteria without the intervention completed a questionnaire about their socio-demographic and dietary characteristics before and after the intervention period. We also estimated greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) from food intake by Life-Cycle Analysis (LCA) and documented the opportunity costs, staff costs, and monetary costs of the implementation. Difference-in-differences approaches were used to define the effects on sustainable dietary practice, wellbeing, GHGE, and costs.
Main Cooperation Partners
Dr. Alina Herrmann, Heidelberg Institute for Global Health (HIGH), Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany
Dr. Bernd Franke, Institute for Energy and Environment Research (ifeu), Heidelberg, Germany
Main Funding Partners
German Federal Ministry for Economy and Climate Protection (BMWK) – National Climate Protection Initiative (NKI)
Duration of the Project
3 years (01 Sep 2021 – 31 Aug 2024)
Project Homepage
https://www.klinikum.uni-heidelberg.de/klimaschutz-in-kliniken-durch-optimierung-der-lieferketten-kliol
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Laura Harrison (candidate Dr. med.)
Keywords
Land use, conflicts, synergies, Agenda 2030, agriculture, land degradation, biodiversity loss, agriculture, gender, climate change, health, Science Policy Interface
Countries
Africa particularly East Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Egypt, Sudan
Summary
In LANUYSNCON, we try to answer urgent questions about the efficient and sustainable use of natural resources. This requires the conceptual and practical involvement of different perspectives, actors and research fields. Using case study in sub-Sahara Africa, particularly in Kenya and Tanzania, we examine the complex trade-offs between different Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The aim is to provide results that will help to understand and consider impacts of land use decisions beyond the respective policy sector in order to promote coherent land use policies.
Methodology
Dynamic Bayesian network analysis
Decision modelling
Structured interviews
GIS analysis
Main Cooperation Partners
Dr. David Amudavi (Biovision Africa Trust)
Charles Meshack (Tanzania Forest Conservation Group)
Professor Aletta Bonn (German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research /iDiv)
Professor Dr. Jan Börner (Institute for Food and Resource Economics /ILR, the University of Bonn)
Professor Dr. Pierre Ibisch (Center for Econics and Ecosystem Management, the University for Sustainable Development Eberswalde /HNEE)
Dr. Thomas Dietz (Institute for Political Science /IFPOL, the University of Münster)
Dr. Guido Schmidt-Traub (United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network /SDSN)
Dr. Claire Brown (UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Center /WCMC)
Dr. Cory Whitney (the University of Bonn’s Horticulture Institute)
Main Funding Partners
The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
Publications
Hermans, K., Berger, E., Biber-Freudenberger, L., Bossenbroek, L., Ebeler, L., Groth, J., Hack, J., Hanspach, J., Hintz, K.S., Kimengsi, J.N., Kwong, Y.M.C. Oakes, R., Pagogna, R., Plieninger, T., Sterly, H., van der Geest, K., van Vliet, J., Wiederkehr, C. (2021). Crisis-induced disruptions in place-based social-ecological research ‐ an opportunity for redirection. GAIA - Ecological Perspectives for Science and Society, 30 (2), pp. 72-76(5). doi.org/10.14512/gaia.30.2.3
See further publication on LANUSYNCON website.
Duration of the Project
1 July 2020 to 30 June 2025
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/lanusyncon.html
Team
Jun.-Prof. Lisa Biber-Freudenberger
Dewi Idam Sari
Hannah Nyakio Kamau
Philipo Jacob
Qambemeda Masala Nyanghura
Sara Velander
Ines Jendritzki
Fatma Salaheldin Ali
Keywords
Landscape heritage, Environmental changes, Heritage conservation, Cultural landscape futures, Eastern Africa
Countries
Ethiopia, Kenya
Summary
Designation of cultural landscapes as UNESCO World Heritage Sites with outstanding universal values defines a globally recognized status, beyond their local values. However, cultural landscapes are not static, and many of them, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa, experience strong local dynamics with massive environmental, economic and social changes and conflicts. This study, therefore, aims to understand UNESCO World Heritage Sites as ‘living’ landscapes that are shaped and transformed through local dynamics including context-specific socio-economic, cultural, environmental and political factors. The case studies will be Konso Cultural Landscape in Ethiopia and the Sacred Mijikenda Kaya Forests in Kenya, UNESCO recognized cultural landscapes in Eastern Africa. The concept of human-environment interactions in cultural landscapes, sustainability and the concept of intersectionality (especially, for the gender dimension) guide the analysis. The analysis and understanding of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as ‘living’ and changing cultural landscapes will contribute to develop approaches to maintain their sustainable futures.
Methodology
Intergenerational change analysis of landscape values and indigenous conservation practices
Human-environment interactions, and land use and livelihood transition analysis
Meta-analysis based on case studies to contribute to academic discourses and policy discussion towards sustainable development and landscape conservation
Mixed methods approach: qualitative and quantitative data collection and analysis
Main Cooperation Partners
Dilla University
Kenyatta University
Main Funding Partners
The Volkswagen Foundation
Duration of the Project
2022 - 2026
Team
Asrat Gella (project coordinator)
Dr. Abiyot Legesse Kura
Dr. Eric Kioko
Dr. Asebe Regassa Debelo
Dr. Till Stellmacher
Dr. Joslyn Muthio Nzau
Dr. Engida Esayas Dube
Dr. Yimer Mohammed Assen
Yesim Pacal
Contact
Asrat Gella, Phone.: +49-228-73-
Summary
The Malabo Montpellier Panel works to accelerate progress towards sustainable food systems transformation in Africa. It identifies areas of progress and positive change across the continent and assesses what successful countries have done differently. It identifies and analyses the most important policy and institutional innovations and programmatic interventions that can be replicated and scaled up by other countries.
The Malabo Montpellier Panel, co-chaired by Dr. Ousmane Badiane (Executive Chairperson, AKADEMIYA2063) and Prof. Joachim von Braun (Distinguished Professor, University of Bonn), convenes 18 leading experts in agriculture, ecology, nutrition, and food security to facilitate policy innovation by African governments to accelerate progress towards sustainable food systems transformation in Africa.
The affiliated Malabo Montpellier Forum provides a platform to promote policy innovation by using the evidence produced by the Panel to facilitate dialogue and exchange among high-level decision-makers on African food systems transformation, climate change adaptation, and mitigation. The Forum is co-chaired by H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn, former Prime Minister of Ethiopia, and H.E. Assia Bensalah Alaoui, Ambassador at Large to His Majesty Mohamed VI, the King of Morocco.
Main Cooperation Partners
AKADEMIYA2063
Main Funding Partners
- The German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
- The African Development Bank (AfDB)
- The United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
Publications
Malabo Montpellier Panel Brochure
Malabo Montpellier Panel Factsheet
All other publications can be found on the project website.
Duration of the Project
01.01.2023 - 31.12.2026
Project Homepage
https://www.mamopanel.org/
Team
Panel Members
Contact
Prof. Dr. Joachim von Braun, Phone.: +49-228-73-1800
Keywords
Climate change impacts, malaria, dietary habits, cardio-metabolic health, young adults
Countries
Ghana
Summary
The main goal of this project is to establish robust understanding of the distributions, the risk factors, and the potential prevention strategies of cardio-metabolic diseases among young adults living in Ghana, with a focus on the role of early-life exposure to malaria. Cardio-metabolic conditions have risen tremendously in Ghana, but data on the cardio-metabolic state of adolescents and young adults are scarce. This lack of basic epidemiological information among adolescents and young adults has also been acknowledged for the behavioral risk factors, such as dietary practices, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, and sedentary behavior. Previous evidence pin-points towards an interlinkage between early-life exposure to malaria and the development of cardio-metabolic conditions in later life. The proposed mechanisms comprise malaria-specific inflammatory processes that alter brain structures and epigenetic profiles, restrictions in growth and function of major cardio-metabolic organs, as well as altered gut microbiota. Up to now, only fragmented research has been conducted to determine the contributions of early-life malaria exposure to the development of risk factors as well as cardio-metabolic conditions in sub-Saharan Africa. Therefore, the specific objectives of this project are i) characterizing the cardio-metabolic profiles and associated behavioral risk factors of young adults in three sites in Ghana; ii) determining the causal impact of early-life exposure to malaria on the cardio-metabolic profiles and associated dietary risk factors among these young adults; and iii) establishing the population’s readiness for an integrated program for the prevention of cardio-metabolic conditions, focusing on malaria prevention and dietary modifications during the first 1000 days of life.
Methodology
Methodologically, this project relies on three large randomized, controlled trials that were conducted 20 years ago to prevent clinical malaria during infancy. These former infants are re-invited to participate in the present study. We anticipate to retrieve 60% of them. They will be invited to the examination centers at nearby hospitals and health facilities. Trained personnel will conduct questionnaire-based interviews focusing on dietary practices, physical examinations incl. anthropometric measurements, venous blood sample collection, and laboratory analysis, incl. HbA1c, fasting glucose, hemoglobin concentration (Hb), malaria rapid test and microscopy, as well as blood lipids. To achieve objective i), we will apply descriptive statistics and appropriate graphical representations of cardio-metabolic conditions, by age group, sex, and early-life malaria status. For objective ii), we will employ instrumental variable analysis using the assignment to the former intervention group as the proxy to malaria protection, and various dietary and cardio-metabolic parameters as the outcomes. For objective iii), we will use an established readiness framework to determine the level of intervention readiness from in-depth interview data.
Main Cooperation Partners
- Dr. Yaw Ampem Amoako and Dr. Samuel Adjei, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana
- Prof. Jürgen May, Bernhard-Nocht-Institute of Tropical Medicine (BNITM), Hamburg, Germany
- Prof. Frank Mockenhaupt, Institute for Tropical Medicine and International Health (ITMIH), Charité – Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany
- Prof. Abdulai Abubakari, University for Development Studies (UDS), Tamale, Ghana
- Dr. Faith Agbozo, University of Health and Allied Sciences (UHAS), Ho, Ghana
- Prof. Abraham Oduro, Research and Development, Ghana Health Service (GHS), Accra, Ghana
- Prof. Daniel Chandramohan, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), London, United Kingdom
Main Funding Partners
University of Bonn, Transdisciplinary Research Area “Technology and Innovation for Sustainable Futures” (TRA6)
Publications
- Utomo DAM, Andriolo V, Bärnighausen T, Danquah I. Linking malaria in pregnancy with dietary behavior of the next generation. Brain Behav Immun. 2019 Aug;80:1-3.
- Bedu-Addo G, Alicke M, Boakye-Appiah JK, Abdul-Jalil I, van der Giet M, Schulze MB, Mockenhaupt FP, Danquah I. In utero exposure to malaria is associated with metabolic traits in adolescence: The Agogo 2000 birth cohort study. J Infect. 2017 Nov;75(5):455-463.
- Buchholz U, Kobbe R, Danquah I, Zanger P, Reither K, Abruquah HH, Grobusch MP, Ziniel P, May J, Mockenhaupt FP. Multiplicity of Plasmodium falciparum infection following intermittent preventive treatment in infants. Malar J. 2010 Aug 26;9:244.
- Danquah I, Dietz E, Zanger P, Reither K, Ziniel P, Bienzle U, Mockenhaupt FP. Reduced efficacy of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in malnourished children. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2009 May;53(5):1753-9.
- Aponte JJ, Schellenberg D, Egan A, Breckenridge A, Carneiro I, Critchley J, Danquah I, Dodoo A, Kobbe R, Lell B, May J, Premji Z, Sanz S, Sevene E, Soulaymani-Becheikh R, Winstanley P, Adjei S, Anemana S, Chandramohan D, Issifou S, Mockenhaupt F, Owusu-Agyei S, Greenwood B, Grobusch MP, Kremsner PG, Macete E, Mshinda H, Newman RD, Slutsker L, Tanner M, Alonso P, Menendez C. Efficacy and safety of intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine for malaria in African infants: a pooled analysis of six randomised, placebo-controlled trials. Lancet. 2009 Oct 31;374(9700):1533-42.
- Mockenhaupt FP, Reither K, Zanger P, Roepcke F, Danquah I, Saad E, Ziniel P, Dzisi SY, Frempong M, Agana-Nsiire P, Amoo-Sakyi F, Otchwemah R, Cramer JP, Anemana SD, Dietz E, Bienzle U. Intermittent preventive treatment in infants as a means of malaria control: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in northern Ghana. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2007 Sep;51(9):3273-81.
Duration of the Project
Start in October 2023
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Marian Abrafi Osei (candidate PhD)
Keywords
One Health, urban transformation, water, sanitation, hygiene, food security, public health, zoonosis
Countries
Germany, Ghana, Brazil, India
Summary
The ‘One Health’ concept adopts an integrative perspective of health, recognizing the intrinsic interconnections between human, animal and environmental health. Interactions between environmental, social and economic systems shape and influence One Health. These interactions are investigated in the context of urban transformation to develop sustainable solutions that maximize synergetic effects, minimize trade-offs and mitigate health risks.
Methodology
- Interdisciplinary approaches
- Systems approaches
- Quantitative & Qualitative
- GIS
- Modeling
Main Cooperation Partners
National: HBRS, UNU-EHS, various institutes of the University Bonn
International: ISSER, FEA-USP, FoRC-USP, IIPH-G
Main Funding Partners
Ministry of Culture and Science of the State government if Northrhine Westphalia (MKW) / Ministerium für Kultur und Wissenschaft des Landes Nordrhein Westfalen
Duration of the Project
05 / 2016 - 12 / 2020 (Phase 1)
01 / 2021 - 06 / 2024 (Phase 2)
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/onehealth.html
Team
Prof. Christian Borgemeister (Speaker)
Prof. Thomas Kistemann (Co-Speaker)
Ana Maria Perez Arredondo (Coordinator)
Contact
Ana Maria Perez Arredondo, Phone.: +49-228-73-4971
Keywords
Diabetes mellitus, OMICS, dietary patterns, migration, ethnicity, adults
Countries
South Africa, Ghana, The Netherlands, Sweden
Summary
The OPTIMA project constitutes a primary prevention project with a personalized approach to combat the growing global prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), collectively termed dysglycaemia. Specifically, this project addresses the differences in the pathophysiology of T2D by ethnicity and sex, which so far, has not resulted in respective guidelines for the prevention of T2D. Therefore, the overarching goal of the OPTIMA project is to develop ethnic- and sex-specific clinically feasible and cost-effective algorithms for the early prediction of dysglycaemia to inform culturally acceptable preventative dietary modifications in European and SSA populations. In the OPTIMA project, Danquah and her team lead the work on the statistical analysis of proteomics data and the identification of dietary patterns related to candidate biomarkers.
Methodology
We work with prospective cohort data from two African cohorts (South African and Ghanaian) and one European cohort (Swedish adults). The study uniquely combines proteomics and metabolomics to identify known and novel ethnic- and sex-specific biomarkers that will not only provide pathophysiological insights into dysglycaemia in different populations, but also improve early prediction of dysglycaemia in European and African populations. We will also identify objective biomarkers reflecting differences in diet that relate to risk of dysglycaemia across European and African populations, which will be used to inform targeted dietary modifications for primary prevention of T2D in the different populations. The cost-effectiveness of the targeted dietary modifications, as well as the perceptions among target populations regarding these early preventative strategies will be assessed in the respective countries (South Africa, Ghana, Germany, Sweden) to inform future implementation of personalised prevention strategies.
Main Cooperation Partners
- Prof. Julia Goedecke, South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC), South Africa
- Prof. Tommy Olsson, Umeå University (UMU), Umeå, Sweden
- Prof. Rikard Landberg, Chalmers University of Science and Technology (Chalmers), Gothenburg, Sweden
- Prof. Charles Agyemang, University Medical Center Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam (AMC), Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Main Funding Partners
German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF)
ERAPerMed – Prevention in Personalized Medicine
Publications
- Katte JC, Sibomana L, Hapunda G, Cikomola JC, Abidha CA.Diabetes in sub-Saharan Africa: what are the next steps? Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2022 Nov;10(11):766-768. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(22)00274-1.
- Bonsu Osei T, Mank I, Sorgho R, Nayna Schwerdtle P, Hövener C, Fischer F, Razum O, Danquah I. Aetiological research on the health of migrants living in Germany: a systematic literature review. BMJ Open. 2022 May 30;12:e058712.
- Osei TB, van Dijk AM, Dingerink S, Chilunga FP, Beune E, Meeks KAC, Bahendeka S, Schulze MB, Agyemang C, Nicolaou M, Holleboom AG, Danquah I. Reduced Rank Regression-Derived Dietary Patterns Related to the Fatty Liver Index and Associations with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus among Ghanaian Populations under Transition: The RODAM Study. Nutrients. 2021 Oct 20;13(11):3679
Duration of the Project
3 years (01 Jan 2023 – 31 Dec 2025)
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Carol Akinyi Abidha (candidate PhD)
Dr. Maike Albers
Tracy Bonsu Osei (candidate PhD)
Keywords
Sustainable agricultural growth; food and nutrition security; targeting innovation investments; development of the agri-food sector; mechanization of skills; youth engagement; digitalization in agriculture; Africa, India
Countries
Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Togo, Tunisia, Zambia
Summary
Africa is increasingly emphasizing the role of innovation in development. The Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy for Africa 2024 takes into consideration the social, economic, and technological progress Africa has made over the last decade. Innovation for sustainable and high agricultural growth forms an important part of this ambition. The German Government has acknowledged this innovation potential and wants to support the improvement of food and nutrition security and sustainable agricultural value chains through Green Innovation Centers (GICs) in Africa and India implemented by the GIZ.
PARI brings together partners from Africa, India and Germany to conduct research on sustainable agricultural development, food systems transformation, and food and nutrition security in Africa and India.
Methodology
PARI pursues the following strategies:
- Analyses of the potential and impact of innovations (which innovations to invest in, where and for whom),
- Identification and assessment of supportive measures to strengthen the framework / policy conditions for the generation and dissemination of promising agriculture and rural areas development–related innovations, and
- Engaging with food, nutrition, agriculture and rural areas development policy makers to inform reforms and investment decisions that an improve job creation and food and nutrition security.
The core topics and thematic research priorities of the PARI have been identified in accordance with the African Union’s CAADP (Africa’s policy framework for agricultural transformation, wealth creation, food security & nutrition, economic growth & prosperity for all) as part of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).
Drawing on these priorities as well as research findings by the PARI partners to date, research is structured in four themes:
Theme 1: Scaling innovations to promote multi-sectoral and sustainable approaches for small-scale producers
- Multi-sectoral approaches in small-scale production systems, incl. animal husbandry and aquaculture
- Promotion of sustainable, climate-smart production methods
- Targeted measures that specifically support and empower women
- Evaluation of experiences with the widespread dissemination of relevant technological and institutional innovations – Africa and India
Theme 2: Investment in infrastructure and skills as framework conditions for rural development and urban linkages
- Complementary investments in hard and soft infrastructure
- Innovative approaches to skill development for small-scale producers
Theme 3: Supporting sustainable and fair food systems through digital opportunities
Theme 4: Structural transformation of national agricultural innovation and research systems
Main Cooperation Partners
National partners in Africa and India:
- Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA)
- African Growth and Development Policy Modeling Consortium (AGRODEP)
- University of Hohenheim (UHOH)
- Akademiya2063
- National Partners in Africa
Main Funding Partners
PARI is funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
Duration of the Project
December 2014 – December 2024
Project Homepage
https://research4agrinnovation.org/
Team
Prof. Dr. Joachim von Braun
Prof. Dr. Assefa Admassie
Dr. Heike Baumüller
Dr. Bezawit Beyene Chichaibelu
Dr. Amy Faye
Dr. Tigabu Degu Getahun
Dr. Zaneta Kubik
Dr. Miriam Romero
Katerina Gileva-Scholz
Contact
Dr. Heike Baumüller, Phone.: +49-228-73-6740
Keywords
biodiversity, tipping points, social-ecological systems
Countries
Peru, Brazil, Bolivia
Summary
The main interest of this project is to generate knowledge base for a more sustainable land-use management based on the functional biodiversity of the soil ecosystem and its relationship with social-ecological systems resilience.
In order to generate and provide such knowledge, PRODIGY aims at: (1) generating a better understanding of the mechanisms leading to tipping points in social-ecological systems, (2) raising the awareness of severe impacts of rapid system shifts, and (3) developing viable management options to avoid the crossing of tipping points. PRODIGY´s research approach is framed within a cascade in which interrelated tipping points in four elements: (1) the soil ecosystem, (2) the economic livelihood, (3) social cohesion, and (4) the regional climate, are assessed.
The project research area is located where the Amazon regions of Peru, Brazil and Bolivia meet, in the so called MAP region (Madre de Dios in Peru, Acre in Brazil and Pando in Bolivia).
Methodology
(1) Assessing the diversity of functional genes in the soil biota
(2) Valuing the contribution of soil biodiversity on economic livelihoods
(3) Assessing the effect of biophysical, social and economic shocks on social cohesion and land-use decisions
(4) Modeling the potential effects of social-ecological system changes on the regional climate
Main Cooperation Partners
Universität Koblenz-Landau, Institute for Environmental Sciences
Universität Hannover, Institute of Soil Science
Freie Universität Berlin, Institute for Latin American Studies
Universität Kassel, Center for Environmental Systems Research
Universität Bonn, Center for Development Research
Universität Hamburg, Institute of Geografy
Herencia (Bolivia)
Universidadde Federal do Acre (Brazil)
Universidad Nacional de San Antonio Abad del Cusco (Peru)
Centro de Innovación Científica Amazónica (Peru)
Asociación Boliviana para la investigación y conservación de ecosistemas Andino-Amazónicos (Bolivia)
Empresa Brasilera de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa)
Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental Amazonica (Brazil)
Instituto de Mudancas Climaticas (Brazil)
Universidad Amazonica de Pando (Bolivia)
Main Funding Partners
BMBF
Duration of the Project
2019 - 08 / 2025
Project Homepage
https://www.uni-koblenz-landau.de/de/landau/fb7/umweltwissenschaften/phys-geo/forschungsprojekte/PRODIGY
Keywords
Digital Farming Technologies, Robotics, Public Perceptions, Crop Farming Systems
Countries
Germany
Summary
Digital technologies are changing agricultural production systems and will characterize agriculture in the future. Autonomous machines (robots), for example, strongly deviate from traditional agricultural images and farming practices. The main interest of this project is to analyze and better understand society’s attitudes toward the increasing digitalization in agriculture. This project is part of the PhenoRob Excellence Cluster at the University of Bonn.
More specifically, this project aims at: (1) Exploring what citizens know about digitization and automation in agriculture and how they perceive current developments, (2) outlining scenarios of what agriculture, especially crop farming, could look like in the future and (3) combining these pieces of informations into an overall picture with the experiences from the practical development of machines and models in the PhenoRob project and farmers' perspectives regarding new technologies. Results may help to improve public communication around new digital farming technologies.
Methodology
- Online surveys and experiments with German citizens
- Multivariate statistical analysis methods
Main Cooperation Partners
DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through PhenoRob Cluster of Excellence)
Duration of the Project
2022 - 2025
Project Homepage
https://www.phenorob.de/cp-6-technology-adoption-and-impact/
Team
Hendrik Zeddies
Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim
Prof. Dr. Gesa Busch (University of Applied Sciences Weihenstephan-Triesdorf)
Contact
Hendrik Zeddies, Phone.: +49-228-73-
Keywords
Biodiversity, transformative change, food and biomass value chains, co-produced knowledge
Countries
Austria, Brazil, Cyprus, EU, Germany, Global, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Peru, United Kingdom, United States
Summary
The overall objective of RAINFOREST is to contribute to enabling, upscaling and accelerating transformative change in Europe towards reducing biodiversity impacts of major food and biomass value chains. This will be done by closing knowledge gaps, demonstrating the effective co-generation and use of knowledge in stakeholder processes to formulate transformative policy options and related innovative governance arrangements, including government procurement practices and regulations.
Specifically, the aim is to i) co-develop and investigate just and viable pathways for transformative change and policies for their implementation with stakeholders, ii) enhance assessment models to allow for the quantification of biodiversity impacts at different spatial and organizational levels (e.g. company, national and global scales), iii) highlight and exemplify the application of the investigated pathways for transformative change in case studies, iv) investigate and co-generate governance and financial reforms, including public sector procurement, at all scales; v) explain, visualize and communicate the results and tools to a diverse audience.
Methodology
RAINFOREST combines different approaches and models from social and natural sciences, such as targeted literature reviews, surveys and interviews, desk-based scoping studies, integrated assessment models, life cycle assessment and multiregional input output models. In addition, we will organize multiple workshops and policy business fora to discuss with and learn from various stakeholders in co-generating viable policy options
Main Cooperation Partners
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU, coordinator)
Internationales Institut für angewandte Systemanalyse (IIASA)
Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung (SGN)
Radboud University Nijmegen (RU)
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn (UBO)
The Cyprus Institute (CYI)
Unilever Innovation Centre Wageningen B.V.
Schweiz AG
Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru (PUCP)
Bonn.realis e.V. (BR, associated partner)
Main Funding Partners
European Commission
Duration of the Project
Dec. 2022 – Dec. 2025
Project Homepage
https://rainforest-horizon.eu/index.html
Team
Prof. Dr. Jan Börner
Dr. Jochen Dürr
Daniel Braun
Keywords
Right Livelihood College, RLC, Alternative Nobel Prize, capacity building, trans-disciplinarity
Countries
India, Kenya, Chile, Egypt, Nigeria, Thailand, Uganda
Summary
The Right Livelihood College (RLC) is a global education and research initiative of universities and the Right Livelihood Award, known as the "Alternative Nobel Prize". The RLC promotes transdisciplinary education and research on social justice, poverty and environmental sustainability together with Laureates and organizations of the "Alternative Nobel Prize".
The RLC initiative comprises ten campuses and centres worldwide. The campuses are located at universities in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Bangkok (Thailand), Bonn (at ZEF, Germany), Córdoba (Argentina), Lund (Sweden), Mumbai (India), Port Harcourt (Nigeria), Santa Cruz (USA),Valdivia (Chile) and Zurich (Switzerland).
The RLC Campus at ZEF provides 3-year PhD scholarships for research projects in the Global South and organizes international conferences, workshops and research seminars, as well as public panel discussions with “Alternative Nobel Prize” Laureates in Bonn.
In 2014, the Global Secretariat of the RLC moved from Penang, Malaysia, to ZEF in Bonn. The Global Secretariat is responsible for setting the overall strategy and direction of the RLC and liaising with and supporting the activities of the RLC campuses and centres around the world. Since 2018, the Global Secretariat started its RLC Alumni programme, funded by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).
Main Cooperation Partners
Right Livelihood Award Foundation, Stockholm
Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS), Sweden
College of Development Studies (CDS), Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, India
University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria
University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Universidad Austral, Valdivia, Chile
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand
University of Córdoba, Argentina
University of Zurich, Switzerland
City of Bonn
Deutsche Welle Global Media Forum
International Association of Universities (IAU) - Affiliate Membership status
Main Funding Partners
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
Volkswagen Foundation
Savings Banks Foundation for International Cooperation
Duration of the Project
Inauguration of RLC Campus Bonn at ZEF in 2011
Opening of RLC Global Secretariat at ZEF in 2014
Beginning of the RLC Alumni programme in 2018
ongoing
Project Homepage
http://www.rlc-bonn.de
Team
Dr. Till Stellmacher
Arthur Guischet
Lani Döhring
PhD students:
Alejandro Mora Motta
Amit Kumar
Dorothy Birungi Namuyiga
Ewere Evelyn Anyokwu
Ahmed Abdalla
Irene Ojuok
Graduates:
Dr. Juliet Wanjiku Kamau
Dr. Willis Okumu
Dr. Divya Swaminathan
Dr. Lai Wan Teng
Contact
Dr. Till Stellmacher, Phone.: +49-228-73-4907
Keywords
Obesity, diabetes mellitus, migration, ethnicity, aetiology, sub-Saharan Africa
Countries
Ghana, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Germany
Summary
The RODAM study assesses the health and wellbeing of Ghanaian residents in Ghana and Europe and follows them up over time. With this unique approach the RODAM study attempts to unravel the causes of cardio-metabolic disease and its risk factors among African migrants in Europe and non-migrants sub-Saharan Africa. Ina Danquah and her team lead the work on nutrition-related risk factors.
Methodology
In five study sites (rural Ghana, urban Ghana, Amsterdam, London, Berlin), representative samples of almost 6000 Ghanaian adults were recruited between 2012 and 2015. The participants underwent physical examinations, questionnaire-based interviews, and biological sample collection. For the assessment of the usual diet, a Ghana-specific food propensity questionnaire was developed, tested, and applied by the German Institute for Human Nutrition – Potsdam-Rehbrücke (DIfE). Follow-up examinations were conducted in rural Ghana, urban Ghana and Amsterdam between 2019 and 2021. The same data and sample collection methods were applied. For nutrition-related questions, we focus on dietary pattern construction, using data-driven, hypothesis-based and hybrid methods.
Main Cooperation Partners
- Prof. Charles Agyemang and Prof. Karien Stronks, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, University of Amsterdam (AMC), Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Prof. Liam Smeeth, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), London, United Kingdom
- Prof. Ellis Owusu-Dabo, Kwame Nkrumah University for Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana
- Prof. Frank Mockenhaupt, Institute of Tropical Medicine and International Health (ITMIH) and Prof. Joachim Spranger, Dean of Medical Faculty, Charité – Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany
- Prof. Ama de Graft-Aikins, Regional Institute for Population Studies (RIPS), University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana
Main Funding Partners
European Commission, 7th Framework Programme and European Research Council (ERC) (PI: Charles Agyemang)
Publications
- Danquah I, Mank I, Hampe CS, Meeks KAC, Agyemang C, Owusu-Dabo E, Smeeth L, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Bahendeka S, Spranger J, Mockenhaupt FP, Schulze MB, Rolandsson O. Subgroups of adult-onset diabetes: a data-driven cluster analysis in a Ghanaian population. Sci Rep. 2023 Jul 4;13(1):10756. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-37494-2.
- Osei TB, van Dijk AM, Dingerink S, Chilunga FP, Beune E, Meeks KAC, Bahendeka S, Schulze MB, Agyemang C, Nicolaou M, Holleboom AG, Danquah I. Reduced Rank Regression-Derived Dietary Patterns Related to the Fatty Liver Index and Associations with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus among Ghanaian Populations under Transition: The RODAM Study. Nutrients. 2021 Oct 20;13(11):3679.
- Assmus F, Galbete C, Knueppel S, Schulze MB, Beune E, Meeks K, Nicolaou M, Amoah S, Agyemang C, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Bahendeka S, Spranger J, Mockenhaupt FP, Smeeth L, Stronks K, Danquah I. Carbohydrate-dense snacks are a key feature of the nutrition transition among Ghanaian adults - findings from the RODAM study. Food Nutr Res. 2021 May 6;65.
- Hampe CS, Sahabandu D, Kaiser V, Telieps T, Smeeth L, Agyemang C, Spranger J, Schulze MB, Mockenhaupt FP, Danquah I*, Rolandsson O*. Geographic location determines beta-cell autoimmunity among adult Ghanaians: Findings from the RODAM study. Immun Inflamm Dis. 2020 Sep;8(3):299-309. * both authors contributed equally
- Danquah I, Addo J, Boateng D, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Meeks K, Galbete C, Beune E, Bahendeka S, Spranger J, Mockenhaupt FP, Stronks K, Agyemang C, Schulze MB, Smeeth L. Early-life factors are associated with waist circumference and type 2 diabetes among Ghanaian adults: The RODAM Study. Sci Rep. 2019 Jul 26;9(1):10848.
- Galbete C, Nicolaou M, Meeks K, Klipstein-Grobusch K, de-Graft Aikins A, Addo J, Amoah SK, Smeeth L, Owusu-Dabo E, Spranger J, Agyemang C, Mockenhaupt FP, Beune E, Stronks K, Schulze MB, Danquah I. Dietary patterns and type 2 diabetes among Ghanaian migrants in Europe and their compatriots in Ghana: the RODAM study. Nutr Diabetes. 2018 Apr 25;8(1):25.
- Danquah I, Galbete C, Meeks K, Nicolaou M, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Addo J, Aikins AD, Amoah SK, Agyei-Baffour P, Boateng D, Bedu-Addo G, Spranger J, Smeeth L, Owusu-Dabo E, Agyemang C, Mockenhaupt FP, Beune E, Schulze MB. Food variety, dietary diversity, and type 2 diabetes in a multi-center cross-sectional study among Ghanaian migrants in Europe and their compatriots in Ghana: the RODAM study. Eur J Nutr. 2018 Dec;57(8):2723-2733.
- Galbete C, Nicolaou M, Meeks KA, de-Graft Aikins A, Addo J, Amoah SK, Smeeth L, Owusu-Dabo E, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Bahendeka S, Agyemang C, Mockenhaupt FP, Beune EJ, Stronks K, Schulze MB, Danquah I. Food consumption, nutrient intake, and dietary patterns in Ghanaian migrants in Europe and their compatriots in Ghana. Food Nutr Res. 2017 Jul 6;61(1):1341809
- Osei-Kwasi HA, Boateng D, Danquah I, Holdsworth M, Mejean C, Terragni L, Powell K, Schulze MB, Owusu-Dabo E, Meeks K, Beune E, Agyemang C, Klipstein- Grobusch K, Stronks K, Galbete C, Nicolaou M. Acculturation and Food Intake Among Ghanaian Migrants in Europe: Findings From the RODAM Study. J Nutr Educ Behav. 2020 Feb;52(2):114-125.
- Agyemang C, Meeks K, Beune E, Owusu-Dabo E, Mockenhaupt FP, Addo J, de Graft Aikins A, Bahendeka S, Danquah I, Schulze MB, Spranger J, Burr T, Agyei-Baffour P, Amoah SK, Galbete C, Henneman P, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Nicolaou M, Adeyemo A, van Straalen J, Smeeth L, Stronks K. Obesity and type 2 diabetes in sub-Saharan Africans - Is the burden in today's Africa similar to African migrants in Europe? The RODAM study. BMC Med. 2016 Oct 21;14(1):166.
- Agyemang C, Beune E, Meeks K, Addo J, Aikins AD, Bahendeka S, Danquah I, Mockenhaupt FP, Schulze MB, Klipstein-Grobusch K, Smeeth L, Stronks K. Innovative ways of studying the effect of migration on obesity and diabetes beyond the common designs: lessons from the RODAM study. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2017 Mar;1391(1):54-70.
Duration of the Project
4 years (01 Jan 2012 – 30 Sep 2015) 7th framework programme
5 years (01 Jan 2018 – 31 Dec 2022) Consolidator grant
Project Homepage
https://www.rod-am.eu/
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Tracy Bonsu Osei (candidate Dr. med.)
Alice Rodriguez Rein (candidate M.Sc.)
Alexandra Meus (candidate Dr. med.)
Keywords
bioeconomy, sustainability, governance, biotechnology, South America
Countries
Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay
Summary
The Southern Cone of South America is one of the most important world regions for the provision of bio-based feedstock worldwide with many countries in the region currently undergoing dynamic changes in various bioeconomic sectors. Despite the region’s enormous potential for sustainable bio-based transformation, promoting environmentally responsible and equitable bioeconomic change remains a major governance challenge. This project focuses on the emergence and sustainability performance of the bioeconomies from Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay and aims to analyze bio-based initiatives from a political sciences and agricultural economics perspective.
The planned research seeks to inform governmental and non-governmental, including private, decision-makers in South America and beyond about entry points for action towards promoting climate smart bio-based innovation processes that safeguard rural employment and the equitable distribution of the benefits and costs of bio-based transformation. Through strong partnerships with Universities in the Southern Cone and engagement at the science-policy interface, the project will strengthen international collaboration and its impact in the study regions.
Methodology
(1) Impact evaluation analysis of national bioeconomy policies
(2) Value chain and value-web analysis
(3) Modeling of land use change and GHG emissions
(4) Comparative case studies
(5) Qualitative data analysis
Main Cooperation Partners
Universität Münster
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
Universidad Austral
Universidad ORT Uruguay
Main Funding Partners
BMEL
Publications
See homepage
Duration of the Project
2020 - 2026
Project Homepage
https://sabio-project.org
Team
Prof. Dr. Jan Börner
Prof. Dr. Thomas Dietz
Dr. Jochen Dürr
Dr. Karen Siegel
Carol Bardi
Maria Eugenia Silva Carrazzone
Daniela Gomel
Daniel Kefeli
Pablo Mac Clay
Serena Olivera
Laura Rojas
Guilherme Stein
Trevor Tisler
Keywords
Climate change mitigation, sustainable diets, obesity, diabetes mellitus, urban, adults
Countries
Burkina Faso
Summary
The global obesity epidemic and its adverse health effects have reached sub-Saharan Africa. In some urban settings, like Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou, up to 43% of the adult population are overweight or obese. At the same time, modernised food systems are responsible for 26% of global greenhouse gas emissions, 50% of land use and 70% of freshwater use. International guidelines on the treatment of overweight and obesity recommend dietary intervention programmes that promote reduced calorie intake and increased physical activity. So far, weight loss interventions rarely consider sustainable dietary concepts, including healthfulness, affordability, cultural appropriateness and environmental friendliness. Therefore, we conducted a family-based, randomised, controlled trial (RCT) for the effects of a sustainable weight loss intervention on cardiometabolic, environmental, and economic outcomes in urban Burkina Faso.
Methodology
The project consists of three phases: i) formative and co-design phase using qualitative and quantitative methods, incl. in-depth interviews about the perceptions of healthy and environmentally friendly diets as well as exploratory dietary pattern analysis to describe prevailing dietary practices, ii) implementation and impact evaluation of the RCT, comparing a 6-month sustainable dietary weight loss intervention programme (n=125) with standard weight loss information material and 5 min oral counselling (n=125) (intervention phase: 0-6 months; consolidation phase: 7-12 months), and iii) process evaluation, incl. qualitative impact mapping through focus group discussions (FGDs), cost-effectiveness and budget impact analysis.
Main Cooperation Partners
Prof. Abdramane Soura and Dr. Roch Modeste Millogo, Institute Supérieure des Sciences de la Population, University of Ouagadougou (ISSP), Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
Dr. Alina Herrmann, Heidelberg Institute for Global Health (HIGH), Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany
Main Funding Partners
Robert Bosch Foundation (RBS) – Robert Bosch Junior Professorship 2019
Publications
- Weil K, Coulibaly I, Fuelbert H, Herrmann A, Millogo RM, Danquah I. Dietary patterns and their socioeconomic factors of adherence among adults in urban Burkina Faso: a cross-sectional study. J Health Popul Nutr. 2023 Oct 10;42(1):107. doi: 10.1186/s41043-023-00451-w.
- Herrmann A, Gonnet A, Millogo RM, d'Arc Kabré WJ, Beremwidougou TR, Coulibaly I, Ouili I, Zoromé S, Weil K, Fuelbert H, Soura A, Danquah I. Sustainable dietary weight loss intervention and its effects on cardiometabolic parameters and greenhouse gas emissions: study protocol of a randomised controlled trial with overweight and obese adults in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. BMJ Open. 2023 Apr 4;13(4):e070524. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070524.
- Herrmann A und Danquah I (2022). Klimawandel und Gesundheit aus Globaler Perspektive. DIVI Jahresbuch 2022/2023. MMV Medizinisch Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft.
Duration of the Project
5 years (01 Jul 2019 – 30 Jun 2025)
Team
Prof. Dr. Ina Danquah
Anaïs Gonnet (project coordinator)
Konstantin Weil (candidate Dr. med.)
Hannah Fülbert (candidate Dr. med.)
Dorothee Liu (candidate Dr. med.)
Keywords
Vegetable production and consumption, Healthy diets, Micronutrients, Food production technologies
Countries
Germany, Ghana, other countries in Africa
Summary
African countries will need to significantly increase their production and consumption of vegetables to address malnutrition and ensure access to healthy foods for the growing population. This is a major challenge, especially in the context of climate change, as heat, water scarcity, and increasing problems with plant diseases and pests make it difficult to increase productivity in the open field. Greenhouse vegetable production could be an important part of the solution for both urban and rural areas. The START project develops new greenhouse technologies ( “deep water cultivation” techniques) for efficient production of various types of vegetables. Research and testing grounds are established at the University of Bonn, considering current and future conditions in Africa.
Ghana is used as one country example. ZEF researchers collect comprehensive data from rural and urban households in Ghana to analyze the role of various types of vegetables for people’s diets and livelihoods and how production and consumption may potentially change through the new greenhouse technologies. Preferences for different local and exotic vegetables as well as the potential acceptance of new production technologies are also investigated. Based on various data sources, future scenarios in which new types of greenhouses produce more vegetables at affordable prices and with less seasonal variation are developed and analyzed in terms of their impacts on nutrition, health, socioeconomic development, and environmental sustainability.
Main Cooperation Partners
- University of Bonn, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation (INRES)
- University of Ghana
- RWTH Aachen
- Bio Innovation Park Rheinland
Main Funding Partners
BMBF
Duration of the Project
04/2023 - 03/2027
Team
at ZEF:
Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim (lead)
Dr. Martin Parlasca
Elisa Langella
Benjamin Bonzo
at INRES (Sustainability Campus Klein-Altendorf):
Prof. Dr. Ralf Pude
Dr. Marcell Moll
Keywords
Urbanization; rural-urban fringes/interfaces; land use and livelihood transition
Countries
Ethiopia
Summary
Studying land use and livelihood transitions in rural-urban interfaces increasingly becomes a major concern in development sciences. Currently, middle-sized cities are places where land governance and livelihood changes are taking place very fast, often faster than in the bigger cities. This research will investigate transitions in land governance and livelihoods in rural-urban interfaces in Ethiopia taking the case of Hawassa. The study understands transition as a multi-level governance process. It takes place in three interconnected levels: niche, socio-technical regime, and socio-technical landscape. The study will analyze how urbanization impacts on smallholder farmers livelihoods in rural-urban interfaces in Hawassa.
Methodology
Mixed methods approach will be followed for data collection and analysis. The first phase of the research consists of qualitative data collection through transect walk, mapping, free listing, preference ranking, focus group discussion, and participant observation. This will be followed by the second phase in which quantitative data is collected through semi-structured and structured interviews. Finally, interviews with experts in government organizations and NGOs will conclude the data collection. Analysis of qualitative data will be carried out with the help of ATLAS-ti, whereas quantitative data will be analyzed using SPSS and STATA.
Main Cooperation Partners
Department of Geography, University of Bonn
Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Cologne
Wondo Genet College of Forestry and Natural Resources, Hawassa University
Main Funding Partners
German Research Foundation (DFG)
Duration of the Project
Feb. 2021 - Jan. 2023
Contact
Dr. Girma Kelboro Mensuro, Phone.: +49-228-73-4917
Keywords
Sustainable Rural Development in West Africa, Academic Capacity Building, Renewable Energy Generation, Agricultural Water Management, Agricultural Economy, Development Management
Countries
Ghana, Niger and Germany. Students from other West African countries
Summary
Established in 2017, the West African Center for Sustainable Rural Transformation (WAC-SRT) develops interdisciplinary research and teaching programs that produce the required knowledge, applicable technological solutions, and locally adapted business models and administrative approaches, like renewable energy sources and agricultural water management. Bringing partners from Niger and Ghana together, the center fosters synergies to address problems that are shared by many West-African Countries. WAC-SRT bridges rural-urban and Anglophone-Francophone divides in order to contribute towards West Africa’s sustainable rural transformation in an interdisciplinary and transnational manner.
Main Cooperation Partners
University of Bonn, Germany / Center for Development Research Bonn (ZEF)
Université Abdou Moumouni (UAM) Niamey, Niger / Faculty of Science and Technology
University for Development Studies (UDS), Tamale, Ghana / Faculty of Agribusiness and Communication Science (FACS)
University of Business and Integrated Development Studies (UBIDS), Wa, Ghana / Faculty of Planning and Land Management (FPLM)
University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana / Institute for Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER)
Main Funding Partners
German Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs
DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service)
Budget for first phase: 1.8 Million Euros
Duration of the Project
Phase 1: 2017 - 2021
Phase 2: 2022 - 2026 (planned)
Project Homepage
https://www.zef.de/wac-srt
Team
At ZEF - Bonn:
Dr. Wolfram Laube (project leader)
Christian Petersheim (project coordinator)
Aline Pereira (project coordinator)
At UAM - Niamey, Niger:
Prof. Dr. Dr. Adamou Rabani (project director)
Dr. Karimoun Massalatchi Illyassou (project coordinator)
Mr. Agbo David (project coordinator)
At UDS - Tamale, Ghana:
Dr. Michael Ayamga (project director)
Mr. Isaac Gershon Kodwo Ansah (project coordinator)
At UBIDS – Wa, Ghana:
Dr. Emmanuel Derbile (project director)
Dr. Elias D Kuusaana (project coordinator)
At University of Ghana – Legon, Ghana:
Prof. Dr. Felix Asante (project coordinator)
Contact
Dr. Wolfram Laube, Phone.: +49-228-73-4914