- Page 1: MAIZE ‐ Global Alliance for Impro
- Page 6 and 7: Executive summary Recurrent food pr
- Page 8 and 9: All SIs include capacity building t
- Page 10 and 11: essentially the same land area whil
- Page 12 and 13: Competing uses for a staple grain A
- Page 14 and 15: Figure 3. Annual global yield fluct
- Page 16 and 17: environments and capacity building.
- Page 18 and 19: productivity while reversing widesp
- Page 20 and 21: Target Group 3: Poor consumers and
- Page 22 and 23: poverty reduction, food insecurity,
- Page 24 and 25: Methods Innovative approaches to a
- Page 26 and 27: Methods Aggressive development, va
- Page 28 and 29: Outcomes Novel tools will empower N
- Page 30 and 31: Based on the maize systems describe
- Page 32 and 33: Program‐level product delivery Pr
- Page 34 and 35: Impact pathways Impact pathways are
- Page 36 and 37: Outcomes for MAIZE as a whole shown
- Page 38 and 39: The portfolio of Strategic Initiati
- Page 40 and 41: Table 2. Summary of impacts of MAIZ
- Page 42 and 43: allocate their time to more product
- Page 44 and 45: fall short of making up the differe
- Page 46 and 47: Priority setting to plan future rev
- Page 48 and 49: Strategic Initiative SI 2. Sustaina
- Page 50 and 51: Strategic Initiative SI 4. Stress t
- Page 52 and 53: Strategic Initiative SI 7. Nutritio
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Partnership principles While the pa
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Based on current staff and partner
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Oversight Committee: This committee
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Review and refine priorities, targe
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Price Trade Policy REDD, PES, Reser
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CGIAR Research Program Outputs from
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Climate change strategy The impact
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Process monitoring will include par
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Given the high costs and difficulti
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the uptake of outputs and the inten
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CIMMYT has developed such partnersh
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12. Decision makers understand and
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Scaling up and out of methodologies
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Bilateral funding: Following the Co
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Table 7A. Income and expenses for S
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Expenses by Strategic Initiative: T
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References Alston, M.J., Norton, W.
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MAIZE Strategic Initiatives Strateg
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Targeting resource‐poor farmers i
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Knowledge of the structure and func
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2014: Analysis of policy options an
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Strategic Initiative 2. Sustainable
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stress‐tolerant germplasm, better
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Researchable issues Effective appr
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Key milestones 2011: Maize‐based
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Modernizing agriculture through use
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coherent exploratory diagnostic tri
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universities, the private sector (i
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What's new in this initiative? To
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Strategic Initiative 4. Stress‐to
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(mycotoxins) also contaminate grain
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CIMMYT and IITA breeding programs a
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Institutional weaknesses affecting
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Research and development partners C
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What's new in this initiative? Dro
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Gerpacio, R.V. and Pingali, P.L. 20
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gain per year. The physiological ba
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Intellectual property management of
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Other producer‐ or consumer‐rel
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considered “women’s” crops, a
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subtropical, mid‐altitude, transi
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mycotoxin monitoring capacity of re
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4. Hubs and protocols to phenotype
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Assuming that low‐cost storage fa
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Mugo, S., Likhayo, P., Karaya, H.,
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More than two‐thirds of the globa
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Commercial QPM seed is currently av
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Outputs 1. High‐throughput and lo
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Linkages with other SIs SI 7 will m
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Meenakshi JV, Johnson N, Manyong V,
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Compared with the genomes of other
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Breeding programs will achieve more
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Strategic Initiative 9. New tools a
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Through collaboration among CIMMYT,
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o Generating predictive power of ha
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generated from CIMMYT and IITA bree
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Strategic Initiatives 1-9. Summary
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Techniques of good quality seed pro
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Annex 1. Population, poor and maize
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Bolivia, CIF Botswana, Department A
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Swaziland, Ministry of Agriculture
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India, Meerut, Sardar Vallabah Bhai
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Uganda, NASECO Seeds 1996 Ltd Ugand
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Annex 3. Impact pathways for MAIZE:
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Main outputs of MAIZE SIs 4. Instit
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Annex 4. CIMMYT maize mega‐enviro