Willy Pradel
International Potato Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Willy Pradel.
BMC International Health and Human Rights | 2011
Donald C. Cole; Fadya Orozco T; Willy Pradel; Jovanny Suquillo; Xavier Mera; Aura Chacon; Gordon Prain; Susitha Wanigaratne; Jessica Leah
BackgroundThe use of highly hazardous pesticides by smallholder farmers constitutes a classic trans-sectoral ‘wicked problem’. We share our program of research in potato and vegetable farming communities in the Andean highlands, working with partners from multiple sectors to confront this problem over several projects.MethodsWe engaged in iterative cycles of mixed methods research around particular questions, actions relevant to stakeholders, new proposal formulation and implementation followed by evaluation of impacts. Capacity building occurred among farmers, technical personnel, and students from multiple disciplines. Involvement of research users occurred throughout: women and men farmers, non-governmental development organizations, Ministries of Health and Agriculture, and, in Ecuador, the National Council on Social Participation.ResultsPesticide poisonings were more widespread than existing passive surveillance systems would suggest. More diversified, moderately developed agricultural systems had lower pesticide use and better child nutrition. Greater understanding among women of crop management options and more equal household gender relations were associated with reduced farm pesticide use and household pesticide exposure. Involvement in more organic agriculture was associated with greater household food security and food sovereignty. Markets for safer produce supported efforts by smallholder farmers to reduce hazardous pesticide use.Participatory interventions included: promoting greater access to alternative methods and inputs in a store co-sponsored by the municipality; producing less harmful inputs such as compost by women farmers; strengthening farmer organizations around healthier and more sustainable agriculture; marketing safer produce among social sectors; empowering farmers to act as social monitors; and using social monitoring results to inform decision makers. Uptake by policy makers has included: the Ecuadorian Ministry of Health rolling out pesticide poisoning surveillance modeled on our system; the Ecuadorian Association of Municipalities holding a national virtual forum on healthier agriculture; and the Ecuadorian Ministry of Agriculture promulgating restrictions on highly hazardous pesticides in June 2010.ConclusionWork with multiple actors is needed to shift agriculture towards greater sustainability and human health, particularly for vulnerable smallholders.
Public Health Nutrition | 2013
Jessica Leah; Willy Pradel; Donald C. Cole; Gordon Prain; Hilary Creed-Kanashiro; M. Carrasco
OBJECTIVE Household food access remains a concern among primarily agricultural households in lower- and middle-income countries. We examined the associations among domains representing livelihood assets (human capital, social capital, natural capital, physical capital and financial capital) and household food access. DESIGN Cross-sectional survey (two questionnaires) on livelihood assets. SETTING Metropolitan Pillaro, Ecuador; Cochabamba, Bolivia; and Huancayo, Peru. SUBJECTS Households (n = 570) involved in small-scale agricultural production in 2008. RESULTS Food access, defined as the number of months of adequate food provisioning in the previous year, was relatively good; 41 % of the respondents indicated to have had no difficulty in obtaining food for their household in the past year. Using bivariate analysis, key livelihood assets indicators associated with better household food access were identified as: age of household survey respondent (P = 0.05), participation in agricultural associations (P = 0.09), church membership (P = 0.08), area of irrigated land (P = 0.08), housing material (P = 0.06), space within the household residence (P = 0.02) and satisfaction with health status (P = 0.02). In path models both direct and indirect effects were observed, underscoring the complexity of the relationships between livelihood assets and household food access. Paths significantly associated with better household food access included: better housing conditions (P = 0.01), more space within the household residence (P = 0.001) and greater satisfaction with health status (P = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Multiple factors were associated with household food access in these peri-urban agricultural households. Food security intervention programmes focusing on food access need to deal with both agricultural factors and determinants of health to bolster household food security in challenging lower- and middle-income country contexts.
Agriculture and Human Values | 2008
Oscar Ortiz; Guillermo Frias; Raul Ho; Hector Cisneros; Rebecca J. Nelson; Renee Castillo; Ricardo Orrego; Willy Pradel; Jesús Alcázar; Mario Bazán
Agricultural Systems | 2013
Oscar Ortiz; Ricardo Orrego; Willy Pradel; Peter Gildemacher; Renee Castillo; Ronal Otiniano; Julio Gabriel; Juan Vallejo; Omar Torres; Gemebredin Woldegiorgis; Belew Damene; Roger Kakuhenzire; Imelda Kasahija; Ignatious Kahiu
Journal of Environmental Protection | 2011
Peter Kromann; Willy Pradel; Donald C. Cole; Arturo Taipe; Gregory A. Forbes
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability | 2011
Oscar Ortiz; Ricardo Orrego; Willy Pradel; Peter Gildemacher; Renee Castillo; Ronald Otiniano; Julio Gabriel; Juan Vallejo; Omar Torres; Gemebredin Woldegiorgis; Belew Damene; Roger Kakuhenzire; Imelda Kasahija; Ignatious Kahiu
Archive | 2013
Donald C. Cole; Gordon Prain; Willy Pradel
Archive | 2005
Oscar Ortiz; Guillermo Frias; Raul Ho; Hector Cisneros; Rebecca J. Nelson; Renee Castillo; Ricardo Orrego; Willy Pradel; Jesús Alcázar; Mario Bazán
Archive | 2014
Donald Cole; Gordon Prain; Willy Pradel
Archive | 2011
Donald C. Cole; Gordon Prain; Willy Pradel; Verónica Cañedo; Jürgen Kroschel