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Featured researches published by Dorene Asare-Marfo.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2017

Availability, production, and consumption of crops biofortified by plant breeding: current evidence and future potential

Amy Saltzman; Ekin Birol; Adewale Oparinde; Meike S. Andersson; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Michael T. Diressie; Carolina Gonzalez; Keith Lividini; Mourad Moursi; Manfred Zeller

Biofortification is the process of increasing the density of vitamins and minerals in a crop through plant breeding—using either conventional methods or genetic engineering—or through agronomic practices. Over the past 15 years, conventional breeding efforts have resulted in the development of varieties of several staple food crops with significant levels of the three micronutrients most limiting in diets: zinc, iron, and vitamin A. More than 15 million people in developing countries now grow and consume biofortified crops. Evidence from nutrition research shows that biofortified varieties provide considerable amounts of bioavailable micronutrients, and consumption of these varieties can improve micronutrient deficiency status among target populations. Farmer adoption and consumer acceptance research shows that farmers and consumers like the various production and consumption characteristics of biofortified varieties, as much as (if not more than) popular conventional varieties, even in the absence of nutritional information. Further development and delivery of these micronutrient‐rich varieties can potentially reduce hidden hunger, especially in rural populations whose diets rely on staple food crops. Future work includes strengthening the supply of and the demand for biofortified staple food crops and facilitating targeted investment to those crop–country combinations that have the highest potential nutritional impact.


Journal of Agribusiness in Developing and Emerging Economies | 2015

Investigating demand for biofortified seeds in developing countries: High-iron pearl millet in India

Ekin Birol; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Bhushana Karandikar; Devesh Roy; Michael T. Diressie

Purpose - – The purpose of this paper is to explore farmer acceptance of a biofortified staple food crop in a developing country prior to its commercialization. The paper focuses on the hypothetical introduction of a high-iron pearl millet variety in Maharashtra, India, where pearl millet is among the most important staple crops. Design/methodology/approach - – A choice experiment is used to investigate farmer preferences for and trade-offs among various production and consumption attributes of pearl millet. The key pearl millet attributes studied include days it takes pearl millet to mature, color of the Findings - – The results reveal that there are three distinct segments in the sample, and there is significant heterogeneity in farmer preferences across these segments. High-iron pearl millet is valued the most by larger households that produce mainly for household consumption and currently have lower quality diets. Households that mainly produce for market sales, on the other hand, derive lower benefits from consumption characteristics such as color and nutrition. Research limitations/implications - – The main limitation of the study is that it uses a stated preference choice experiment method, which suffers from hypothetical bias. At the time of implementing this study biofortified high-iron pearl millet varieties were not yet developed, therefore the authors could not have implemented revealed preference elicitation methods with real products and payment. Originality/value - – The method used (stated preference choice experiment method) is commonly used to value non-market goods such as environmental goods and products that are not yet in the market. It’s application to agriculture and in developing countries is increasing. As far as the authors know this is the first choice experiment implemented to investigate farmer/consumer preferences for biofortified crops. The study presents valuable information for development and delivery of biofortified crops for reducing micronutrient deficiencies.


2010 AAAE Third Conference/AEASA 48th Conference, September 19-23, 2010, Cape Town, South Africa | 2010

Investigating the Role of Poultry in Livelihoods and the Impact of HPAI on Livelihoods Outcomes in Africa: Evidence from Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria

Ekin Birol; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Gezahegn Ayele; Akwasi Mensah-Bonsu; Lydia Ndirangu; Benjamin Okpukpara; Devesh Roy; Yorbol Yakhshilikov


Archive | 2013

Prioritizing countries for biofortification Interventions using country-level data

Dorene Asare-Marfo; Ekin Birol; Carolina Gonzalez; Mourad Moursi; Salomon Perez; Jana Schwarz; Manfred Zeller


Archive | 2011

A latent class approach to investigating farmer demand for biofortified staple food crops in developing countries: The case of high-iron pearl millet in Maharashtra, India

Ekin Birol; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Bhushana Karandikar; Devesh Roy


Journal of Agricultural Economics | 2014

Smallholder Demand for Maize Hybrids in Zambia: How Far do Seed Subsidies Reach?

Melinda Smale; Ekin Birol; Dorene Asare-Marfo


Archive | 2010

Investigating the role of poultry in livelihoods and the impact of avian flu on livelihoods outcomes in Africa

Ekin Birol; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Gezahegn Ayele; Akwasi Mensa-Bonsu; Lydia Ndirangu; Benjamin Okpukpara; Devesh Roy; Yorbol Yakhshilikov


Archive | 2009

Investigating the Role of Poultry in Livelihoods and the Impact of HPAI in Ethiopia

Gezahegn Ayele; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Ekin Birol; Devesh Roy


Archive | 2016

Assessing the adoption of high iron bean varieties and their impact on iron intakes and other livelihood outcomes in Rwanda: Listing Exercise Report

Dorene Asare-Marfo; Caitlin Herrington; Jeffrey Alwang; Eliud A. Birachi; Ekin Birol; Michael T. Diressie; Leonidas Dusenge; Jose Funes; Enid Katungi; R.A. Labarta; Catherine Larochelle; Lister Katsvairo; Keith Lividini; Abdelrahman Lubowa; Mourad Moursi; Joseph Mulambu; Abdoul Murekezi; Augustine Musoni; Jean d’Amour Nkundimana; Adewale Oparinde; Kate Vaiknoras; Manfred Zeller


Archive | 2010

Investigating economywide and household-level impacts of sector-specific shocks in a poor country: The case of avian flu in Ethiopia

Gezahegne Ayele; Ekin Birol; Xinshen Diao; Dorene Asare-Marfo; Devesh Roy; Marcelle Thomas

Collaboration


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Ekin Birol

International Monetary Fund

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Devesh Roy

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Adewale Oparinde

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Keith Lividini

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Mourad Moursi

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Meike S. Andersson

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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Amy Saltzman

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Michael T. Diressie

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Carolina Gonzalez

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

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