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    The objective of 
    the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and 
    Technology for Development (IAASTD) was to assess the impacts of past, 
    present and future agricultural knowledge, science and technology on the: 
      
      
      reduction of 
      hunger and poverty,  
      
      improvement of 
      rural livelihoods and human health, and  
      
      equitable, 
      socially, environmentally and economically sustainable development.  
       
    The IAASTD was 
    initiated in 2002 by the World Bank and the Food and Agriculture 
    Organization of the United Nations (FAO) as a global consultative process to 
    determine whether an international assessment of agricultural knowledge, 
    science and technology was needed. Mr. Klaus Töepfer, Executive Director of 
    the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), opened the first 
    Intergovernmental Plenary (30 August - 3 September 2004) in Nairobi, Kenya, 
    during which participants initiated a detailed scoping, preparation, 
    drafting and peer review process.   
    The outputs from 
    this assessment are a Global and five Sub-Global reports; a Global and five 
    Sub-Global Summaries for Decision Makers; and a cross-cutting Synthesis 
    Report with an Executive Summary. The Summaries for Decision Makers and the 
    Synthesis Report specifically provide options for action to governments, 
    international agencies, academia, research organizations and other decision 
    makers around the world.   
    The reports draw on 
    the work of hundreds of experts from all regions of the world who have 
    participated in the preparation and peer review process. As has been 
    customary in many such global assessments, success depended first and 
    foremost on the dedication, enthusiasm and cooperation of these experts in 
    many different but related disciplines. It is the synergy of these 
    inter-related disciplines that permitted IAASTD to create a unique, 
    interdisciplinary regional and global process.   
    We take this 
    opportunity to express our deep gratitude to the authors and reviewers of 
    all of the reports-their dedication and tireless efforts made the process a 
    success. We thank the Steering Committee for distilling the outputs of the 
    consultative process into recommendations to the Plenary, the IAASTD Bureau 
    for their advisory role during the assessment and the work of those in the 
    extended Sec |  | 
    Secretariat. We 
    would specifically like to thank the cosponsoring organizations of the 
    Global Environment Facility (GEF) and the World Bank for their financial 
    contributions as well as the FAO, UNEP, and the United Nations Educational, 
    Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for their continued support of 
    this process through allocation of staff resources.
    
     
    We acknowledge with 
    gratitude the governments and organizations that contributed to the 
    Multidonor Trust Fund (Australia, Canada, the European Commission, France, 
    Ireland, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom) and the United States 
    Trust Fund. We also thank the governments who provided support to Bureau 
    members, authors and reviewers in other ways. In addition, Finland provided 
    direct support to the Secretariat. The IAASTD was especially successful in 
    engaging a large number of experts from developing countries and countries 
    with economies in transition in its work; the Trust Funds enabled financial 
    assistance for their travel to the IAASTD meetings.  
    We would also like 
    to make special mention of the organizations who hosted the regional 
    coordinators and staff and provided assistance in management and time to 
    ensure success of this enterprise: the African Center for Technology Studies 
    (ACTS) in Kenya, the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture 
    (IICA) in Costa Rica, the International Center for Agricultural Research in 
    the Dry Areas (ICARDA) in Syria, and the WorldFish Center in Malaysia.
     
    The final 
    Intergovernmental Plenary in Johannesburg, South Africa, was opened on 7 
    April 2008 by Achim Steiner, Executive Director of UNEP. This Plenary saw 
    the acceptance of the Reports and the approval of the Summaries for Decision 
    Makers and the Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report by an overwhelming 
    majority of governments.  
 
      
        | Signed: Co-chairsHans H. Herren,
 Judi Wakhungu
 DirectorRobert T. Watson
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