About us

World Geography of the Peanut is a project of the Peanut CRSP, University of Georgia. This project is made possible through support provided by the U.S. Agency for International Development, under the term of Grant No. LAG-G-00-96-0013-00. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the USAID.

This project is a research and information initiative aimed at understanding and disseminating information on peanut production and utilization systems around the world through systematic research and publication. The project links the biophysical aspects of the peanut cropt to human dimensions at the international, natioanl, and local levels. Basically, it answers following questions: who grows peanuts, where it is grown, in what geographic regions and countries, under what climate, in what farming systems, using what kind of cultivation practices, and varieties? It also concentrates on peanut trade as well as how peanuts are used in different parts of the world.

During the past four years, an accessible global database (500 studies; 5 detailed country studies) on peanut and a corresponding networking system to generate information on socioeconomic forces, production zones and systems, post-harvest patterns for monitoring social equity, technology exchange and environmental protection has been established. Given increasing advances in information technology (Internet, CD-ROM, web-based training) as well as accumulating information about peanuts, the need for further advancing an integrated global, national, and regional agroecologically framed database is greater than ever. Scientists, policy makers, producers, and consumers are requiring more systematic information. The need is especially high for extrapolating between similar production systems and setting of sound research agendas for the CRSP and national programs. Finally, an integrated statistical and spatial database is necessary to establish baselines and monitor long-term social and environmental impacts of changes in peanut production and use. The project will generate decision support tools and information based on user needs in the global peanut research and development community.

Objective:1. Build through a networking approach a low-cost Global Peanut Knowledge Base emphasizing the integration of socioeconomic data with biophysical and agroecological data.

Objective:2. Design and implement a peanut research data sharing/archival website (thePeanut Data Clearinghouse) based on the National Spatial Data Infrastructure model.

Objective:3. Analyze representative peanut food systems and production zones for further in-depth, low-cost "ground truthing" research and extrapolation testing involving social and biological scientists in host country studies, and dissemination of spatial data in an Almanac Characterization Tool format.

Project Management

Robert E. Rhoades, PI
Director, Sustainable Human Ecosystems Laboratory
Dept. of Anthropology, University of Georgia

Virginia Nazarea, Co-PI
Professor, Dept. of Anthropology

Contact

Mailing address
World Geography of the Peanut
The Sustainable Human Ecosystems Laboratory
Dept. of Anthropology,
250 Baldwin Hall
University of Georgia,
Athens, GA 30602

Tel. : 706-542-3141
Fax: 706-542-5617
For more information about the Project and LANRA
email: lanra [with] @ uga.edu

 

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