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Université de Dschang

Université de Dschang

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6 Projects, page 1 of 2
  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101082057
    Overall Budget: 2,162,550 EURFunder Contribution: 2,156,300 EUR

    Demand for agricultural commodities from EU agrofood systems are driving land use change in biodiversity-rich countries in the Global South, leading to major biodiversity losses. Tackling the EU’s global biodiversity footprint is a top EU policy priority. The science demonstrates the need for transformative change in economic, social, and financial models for safe and just transitions, but there is limited knowledge on how to achieve transformative change in practice, which requires navigation of biodiversity, climate and equity trade-offs and synergies. TC4BE will support transdisciplinary research on different dimensions and scales of telecoupled agrofood systems, engaging diverse stakeholders, including EU and producer-country policy-makers and Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Scenarios and modelling of EU agrofood systems transformations, will be complemented by analysis of EU governance, trade, legal, consumer, collective action and sustainable finance levers and social innovations. In three producer countries (Cameroon, Colombia, and Kenya), TC4BE will generate methods for and assess land use change drivers, at-risk biodiversity hotspots, and the effectiveness of Sustainable Landscapes Initiatives. In six landscapes TC4BE will explore relationships to nature, perceptions of socio-ecological histories and futures, rigorously evaluate SLIs, and conduct regenerative enterprise case studies using a structured landscape learning process. Transformative change pathways will be co-generated by diverse stakeholders recognizing plural values and informed by new evidence, decision-making tools and training modules. The overall process will strengthen the capacity of participating stakeholders (care-knowledge-agency) to influence biodiversity and equity outcomes. A global dialogue, facilitated by the Global Landscapes Forum will link the transdisciplinary processes between the scales, supported by additional dissemination and communication activities.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101060765
    Overall Budget: 2,674,510 EURFunder Contribution: 2,674,510 EUR

    CLEVER identifies new leverage points for sustainable transformation informed by a novel holistic approach to quantify biodiversity and other impacts of trade in major raw and processed non-food biomass value chains. In line with Pillars 3 & 4 of the EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030, we address all outcomes of this topic by adopting perspectives at the system and value chain levels. At the system level, we improve our understanding of leakage effects in the non-food biomass trade system informed by quasi-experimental evaluation techniques, quantitative scenario modelling, and policy case studies. At the value chain level, CLEVER engages with key stakeholders (i.e., producers, traders, retailers, civil society, and policy makers) in R&I co-design to identify leverage points for transformative change at corporate and institutional levels. Value chain analyses will produce ecological footprints from advanced life cycle analyses and enhance our understanding of actor-specific behavior focusing on trade in soy, timber, wood pulp, and fishmeal/oil between Europe, South America, and Central Africa. Further CLEVER products and tools to influence decision-making at the right level include (1) improved indicators of biodiversity loss to inform business and policy, (2) enhanced features for the global modelling platform GLOBIOM to quantify trade-mediated leakage and SDG interdependencies in biomass value chains, and (3) an innovation action pool to support public and private decision-makers in choosing governance instruments that effectively enhance biodiversity and promote climate change mitigation and adaptation. Building on prior and ongoing engagement of its members at the science-policy interface and through partnerships with other projects under the destination on biodiversity and ecosystem services, the consortium will leverage CLEVER knowledge and tools to strengthen IPBES and IPCC and enhance science-industry cooperation for sustainable bioeconomic transformation.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 290732
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  • Funder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-23-CE27-0023
    Funder Contribution: 784,045 EUR

    The Congo Basin holds the world's second largest continuous rainforest, after the Amazon Basin, and contains about 70 % of Africa’s forest cover. These forests are home to about 30 million people and support livelihoods for more than 75 million additional people who notably rely on local natural resources for food and health. Despite their importance, the emergence and diffusion of agriculture in Congo Basin rainforests remain largely undocumented. Our project, RainForStory, aims to decipher the history of development of agriculture in this region. Toward this aim, we will develop an original multidisciplinary approach involving palaeoecology, palaeoclimatology, archaeology, archaeobotany, and plant genetics. Specifically, our approach will aim to describe the spatio-temporal dynamics of propagation and use of a set of culturally emblematic food plants relying on data acquired through a multidisciplinary approach. RainForStory will allow for the first time the collaboration of researchers from different disciplines and research laboratories (ISEM, CEREGE, PALOC, CEPAM, DIADE, as well as foreign researchers) who all present strong and independent expertise on the study of African rainforests and their people. In turn, this will provide a unique opportunity to develop an integrative answer to the question of the history of emergence and diffusion of rainforests from Central Africa. Understanding the history of agricultural emergence and diffusion in the region and the influence of past human management practices on the evolutionary history of crops will help to orient the conservation and sustainable management of local food plants, and more generally of forest genetic resources, which represent important food and commercial products to local people and are highly threatened by global change. By doing so, RainForStory will contribute to the Sustainable Development Goals 1 (no poverty), 2 (zero hunger) and 15 (life on land).

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101083175
    Funder Contribution: 974,595 EUR

    The overall objective of Joint AQ Africa is to contribute to the harmonization of higher education in Africa by setting up comparable quality assurance systems, defined by the cooperation of national authorities and HEI. The project will engage three pilot countries (Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire), in the development of a model for university institutional and programme level evaluation, based on a joint and complementary approach (national/regional/African continental) in order to inspire joint accreditation in French-speaking Africa, in particular. The methodology involves several stakeholders in this process and ultimately addresses the different gaps that exist in the various countries targeted, in terms of consolidating their QA and accreditation systems:a)Ministries and QA agencies and their capacities to agree on a common model for joint assessment;b)Universities and their abilities to assess their performance against these standards and to build their own internal QA processes;c)The main networks and associations for higher education and quality assurance in Africa, and their capacities to work collectively in the region and internationally, and to promote and apply similar approaches to other African countries and regions.The main outputs will be the development of a joint evaluation model, guidelines for its execution and six pilot evaluations. African partner universities will build capacity for self-assessment, through training for quality assurance staff. Training is also offered to the staff of ministries, and spaces are created whereby ministries and universities co-create approaches and build trust towards their respective QA systems. Through CAMES and important associated partners, awareness will be raised at the political level on the importance of the consolidation of a regional accreditation approach, which can serve systems which do not yet have QA agencies and can put forward mutual recognition of accreditation decisions.

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