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Washington, DC - Around the world, farmers, scientists, researchers, and NGOs are creating innovative, on-the-ground solutions for the problems they face each day: water scarcity, resource depletion, land degradation, crop loss, and weather volatility. Many of these ground-breaking ideas have great potential to be replicated and scaled out across the globe.

Food Tank is excited to be collaborating with the McKnight Foundation's Collaborative Crop Research Program (CCRP) during 2015 to highlight farmer-led solutions to protect natural resources, increase incomes, and improve livelihoods.

Here are some examples of how innovation can be shared among farmers, researchers, entrepreneurs, and consumers:

Recently, the first annual Food Tank Summit brought together more than 75 speakers, 300 participants, and 15,000 live-stream viewers to discuss and exchange ideas on a variety of food and agriculture topics. Among the panels was a session dedicated to Democratizing Innovation.

Keynote speaker John Fisk, Director of the Wallace Center at Winrock International, began the session by defining democratizing innovation as scaling innovations with the purpose of enabling self determination.

Seven panelists spoke about their different approaches to scaling up and scaling out innovations—from shifting investment practices to targeting supply chains—but all were joined by optimism for disruptive food system changes that would make the existing model obsolete.

Panelists also emphasized the importance of bringing together and engaging different stakeholders in the food system, including local governments, smallholder farmers, and public and private sectors in order to drive changes on the ground.

WATCH each of the panelists discuss their approach to democratizing innovation:

John Fisk (Winrock International) on democratizing responsibility and changing the system

Steve Brescia (Groundswell International) on working with local governments to support small farmers

Doug Hertzler (ActionAid) on engaging local governments and smallholders

Jill Isenbarger (Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture) on building active food citizenship

Aaron McNevin (World Wildlife Fund) on private sector research

Jessica Rosen (Forum for the Future) on rethinking food system as a value network

Shen Tong (Food-X) on changing investments to change the industry and doing well

Food Tank invites you to become part of the discussion on farmer-led innovations and share your experience in creating innovative, on-the-ground solutions to agriculture and farming challenges around the world.

Questions to consider include:

1. What food and agriculture related challenges have you faced that have required you to come up with a solution? What was your solution?

2. What channels, platforms and resources have you used to learn about innovations that address agricultural challenges?

3. How can we harness current innovations, knowledge generation processes, and evidence to improve food and nutrition security?

4. How can sustainable agricultural innovations be more effectively shared with farmers, eaters, agronomists, women and youth groups, scientists, and other stakeholders around the world?

5. In what areas do we need more research to create environmentally sustainable and socially just solutions for the future of food and agriculture?

Please email your answers to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and share these questions with your network!

Food Tank will be compiling your answers and sharing updates as the information is gathered.

Thank you in advance for joining the conversation!