University of Zimbabwe, Soil Fertility Consortium for Southern AfricaDepartment of Soil Science and Agricultural Engineering (SOFECSA)Mapfumo, Paul2008-12-052008-12-052007http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36376The table of contents for this item can be shared with the requester. The requester may then choose one chapter, up to 10% of the item, as per the Fair Dealing provision of the Canadian Copyright ActThe report is a synthesis of the inception workshop where all collaborating partners were represented. The project works with smallholder farmers in identifying and using improved farming technologies, and to enhance the capacity of participating institutions and individual researchers to conduct and manage research and development, using integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) and livelihoods as entry points. The planning workshop aimed at fostering a shared understanding of project objectives, activities and anticipated outputs among major partners in order to enable development of operational plans. Each country team is responsible for their own work plan details, drawn from workshop proceedings and insights.application/pdfenCAPACITY BUILDINGVULNERABLE GROUPSSMALLHOLDERSCLIMATE CHANGEADAPTATION TO CHANGEAGRICULTURAL RESEARCHZIMBABWEWEST AFRICALack of resilience in African smallholder farming : exploring measures to enhance the adaptive capacity of local communities to pressure climate change; a synthesis report of the Project Inception Workshop held July 10-12 2007, Harare, ZimbabweWorkshop Report