BioDIVA conducts inter- and transdisciplinary research on land-use change and agrobiodiversity in South India.
The aim is to generate transformation knowledge that enables local land users and decision makers to assess the current situation and devise strategies for future land resource use.
The interactions between social, economic, ecological and institutional processes in the context of rice-biodiversity in the Western Ghats of Kerala, South India are examined.
Located at Leibniz University Hannover, BioDIVA is one of 12 research groups under the social-ecological programme (SÖF/ FONA) funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) from 2010 to 2014.
The research team is made up of Indian and German researchers who explore the social, economic and ecological aspects of agrobiodiversity in the rice farming system in Wayanad District.
The central concern is to generate knowledge that enables to halt the loss of agrobiodiversity and to develop future perspectives for indigenous people.
The development of transformation knowledge is a first step to tackle both the social and ecological aspects of agrobiodiversity loss, stressing not only the need for conservation but also calling for innovations.
The state of Kerala has a high variety of local rice landraces in the uplands. However, recent and ongoing changes in land use are accompanied by the loss of biodiversity and local species in agricultural systems, the degradation of argo-ecosystems and the transformation of gender relations are concrete manifestations.
The research project builds on interdisciplinary research in rural sociology, ecology, land use change, gender studies as well as institutional and resource economy. Moreover, BioDIVA integrates non-academic knowledge in order to foster the understanding of real life problems faced by local land users.
The key strategic partner in the field is the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation (MSSRF) in Chennai, India; whereas selected ventures are pursued with the German Society for International Cooperation (GIZ) and the International Food and Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
Preview: Handbook Cultivate Diversity!
The Rice Seed System in Wayanad
Briefing Note 8, 2014
Food for thought: Facing land use change in Wayanad.
Briefing Note 6, 2014 (Malayalam version)
"Cultivating Diversity": Results from the national level dialogue workshop. Briefing Note 5, 2014
Cultivate Diversity! A Handbook on Transdisciplinary Approaches to Agrobiodiversity Research. September 2013
Multi-stakeholder dialogue on land use: Transdisciplinary approaches to address landscape transformation in Kerala.
Briefing Note 4, 2013
Marketing Gandhakasala: Local varieties for livelihood options.
Briefing Note 3, 2013
Resilience in transformation: „A study into the capacity for resilience in indigenous communities in Wayanad“.
Briefing Note 2, 2013
Visions for Wayanad: „The land of paddy fields“.
Briefing Note 1, 2013