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ACT believes
in building partnerships with strategically positioned
stakeholders as an efficient approach to better serve the
Network membership.
ACT is
proactively pursing collaboration, partnerships and liaison with
various regional and inter-continental organizations.
At national
level,
key players and stakeholders (including government departments,
NGOs, farmer organizations and Private Sector) are the central
lifeline for the Network. ACT notes as a matter of principle
that the Network will have to draw its mandate based on the
needs of these national and local level players and
stakeholders. There should be clear ownership and commitments
from these institutions, players and stakeholders.
The Network
aims to establish formal links and partnerships, if seen
necessary and valuable to the extent of MoUs) with relevant
national research institutes, training centres and government
departments. This will be based on identified issues of mutual
practical collaboration. These players and stakeholders are
potentially the key users of the Network’s services; on the
other hand there are the ones to contribute to the value of the
information/knowledge that makes networking worth-the-while for
everybody.
Currently,
conservation agricultural related networks or national
committees are known to exist or been established in a number of
countries.
It should be
noted that there are number of other Networks who are also
collaborating with ACT which are not necessary CA based, but do
embrace some elements of CA.
At
International
level,
ACT is partnering with organizations such as FAO, ICRAF, IFAD
and SADC in its operations. ACT has also been an active player
in the NEPAD agenda, especially on Pillar 1 aspects that
addresses sustainable land and water management. |