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Governance & advisory bodies

Scroll below this diagram to see the various bodies by clicking on appropriate tab.

GCP-organisation-web

  1. Executive Board
  2. Consortium Committee
  3. IPAC
  4. SiMAC
  5. Transition Taskforce

Until May 2008, GCP's apex governing body was the Programme Steering Committee (PSC). Effective June 2008, the Executive Board replaced the PSC as the apex governing body. Profiles of Board memebers are below. To see Board functions, scroll to the bottom of this page.

Andrew Bennett, Board Chair

Andrew Bennett

Dr Andrew Bennett is the President of the Tropical Agricultural Association (UK) and chairs the Board of Trustees for the Science and Development Network (SciDev.Net). Dr Bennett is a Non-Executive Director of the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture, CABI International (formerly known as the Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau) and the International Baccalaureate Organisation, UK. Dr Bennett is a member of the board for the International Bamboo and Rattan Network (INBAR), the European Centre of Underutilised Crops (ECUC) and the Doyle Foundation (UK).

He was formerly Executive Director of the Syngenta Foundation and Director of Rural Livelihoods and Environment at the Department for International Development (DFID, UK) where he was responsible for professional advice on policy and programmes on livelihoods, natural resources, environment, sustainable development and research. He also formerly chaired the Board of Trustees for the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR). Dr Bennett has more than 45 years of experience in international development and disaster management, having worked in development programmes in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Pacific and the Caribbean. He has extensive experience of international negotiations on natural resources, research, environment and development.

More specifically, Dr Bennett’s areas of expertise include agronomy, tropical agriculture, forestry, research, environmental management, international development, negotiation and governance.

Interviews with our Board Chair: Blogpost | Video

Andreas Graner, Board member

Andreas Graner

Since 2007, Prof Andreas Graner has been Acting Director of the Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK), Germany. He also heads IPK’s Genebank Department and is a professor of Plant Genetic Resources, University of Halle (Germany), serving in both capacities since 1999, and he is a member of the German Academy of Natural Sciences, Leopoldina.

Prior to joining IPK, Prof Graner was a Research Scientist at the Institute for Resistance Genetics, Gruenbach (1990–1997), after which he came to IPK as a Senior Scientist and coordinator of the Plant Genome Resource Centre, IPK Gatersleben (1997–1999).

Among others, Prof Graner serves on the editorial boards of Molecular Breeding and Theoretical and Applied Genetics; the Steering Board of the German Society of Plant Breeding (GPZ); the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max-Planck-Institute for Breeding Research (MPIZ), Cologne; the Scientific Advisory Board of the Julius Kueh Institute and the Steering Committee of the International Barley Sequencing Consortium.

His areas of expertise include cereal genetics, genomics, molecular breeding and plant genetic resources. He is particularly interested in the development of genome-based strategies for better utilisation of plant genetic resources.

Calvin Qualset, Board member

Calvin Qualset

Prof Qualset is Professor Emeritus at the University of California–Davis, USA where he has served since 1967 as Professor, Department Chair, Associate Dean, and Director of several programmes, including the Genetic Resources Conservation Program.

Recent activities include Principal Investigator of a 13-lab wheat genomics project sponsored by the US National Science Foundation Plant Genome (1999–2004); Co-Director, McKnight Foundation Collaborative Crop Research Project (1995–2002) in USA and Mexico; co-PI of NSF-sponsored project on wheat landrace diversity in Turkey, and Coordinator, International Triticeae Mapping Initiative (1989–2000); and was Vice-Chair of the IRRI Board of Trustees (1999–2004).

He is past President of the American Society of Agronomy and the Crop Science Society of America. He has conducted reviews for several CGIAR centers and various agencies in Africa, Asia, America, and Europe. Prof Qualset has presented invited seminars and lectures in several countries and co-organised international meetings.

Prof Qualset’s areas of specialisation include plant genetics and breeding research, variety development, and genetic resources research on traits, distributions, and landraces of cereal crops.

Esther Murugi Kahangi, Board member

Esther Murugi Kahangi

Esther Murugi Kahangi is a Professor at the Department of Horticulture, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT), Kenya, where she has been since 1982. She is also the Deputy Vice Chancellor in charge of Research, Production and Extension (JKUAT), and a member of the Board of Directors, Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI).

She has previously served as the Coordinator East African Regional Programme and Research Network for Biotechnology, Biosafety and Biotechnology Policy Development (BIO-EARN) and at JKUAT as the Director, Institute for Biotechnology Research; Dean, Faculty of Agriculture; and Head, Department of Horticulture—a department she initiated. In 2002, she was warded the UNESCO Chair in Biotechnology for her outstanding work.

Prior to coming to JKUAT, Prof Kahangi was a Research Officer at the Kenyan Ministry of Agriculture’s National Horticulture Research Station, before rising to Head of Vegetable Seed Production Section, in charge of research in vegetable seed production nationwide.

Prof Kahangi has also consulted for various government, non-government and international funding agencies on impact assessment—including environmental impact assessments—project appraisals, and feasibility studies.

Her areas of expertise are plant physiology, tissue culture, genetic characterisation of crop plants and technology dissemination to end users.

Harold Roy-Macauley, Board member

Harold Roy-Macauley

Dr Harold Roy-Macauley is the Executive Director of le Conseil Ouest et Centre africain pour la recherche et le développement agricoles (CORAF/WECARD) in Dakar, Senegal, where he also served as Director of Programmes from 2009 to 2011.

Before CORAF/WECARD, Dr Roy-Macauley worked for the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), initially undertaking the role as Regional Coordinator, West and Central Africa, in April 2006, after which he relocated to Guinea in January 2009 to take up the position of ICRAF Representative in the Upper Guinea Node for West Africa, overseeing research and development activities, notably in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Côte d’Ivoire.

Jeffrey B McElroy, Board member

Jeffrey B McElroy

Dr Jeffrey B McElroy is the Vice-President—Research and Development for Backyard Farms LLC, in Madison, Maine, USA, where he heads up the research and development efforts for the company and conducts research focused on factors that impact flavor characteristics in fresh produce. 

Before joining Backyard Farms, Dr McElroy was Vice-President, BioEnergy Seeds for Mendel Biotechnology, Inc, in Hayward, California, USA, where he led the strategic planning and project implementation for the BioEnergy Seeds programme (2008-2010), Vice-President, Research at Harris Moran Seed Company (USA), where he managed plant breeding programme- and research for many vegetables (1999-2008).  Dr McElroy was the Head, Vegetable Breeding at L Dæhnfeldt A/S, Denmark (1994–1997), before rising to Divisional Manager Vegetable Seeds (1997–1998). Between 1986 and 1994, he was a Plant Breeder at Petoseed Co Inc (USA). As a postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Nebraska, Dr McElroy conducted basic collaborative research on genetic resistance to common bacterial blight and rust of dry beans which included fieldwork in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. Prior to that, he was also a Visiting Research Associate, Bean Programme, at CIAT, Cali, Colombia.

Dr McElroy has travelled extensively throughout Europe, Asia and South America.

His areas of expertise include economic botany, plant breeding and research management.

Markus Palenberg, Board member

Markus PalenbergDr Markus Palenberg is Managing Director of the Institute for Development Strategy (IfDS), a small independent research institute located in Munich, Germany.

Dr Palenberg is a researcher, evaluator and advisor. His research focuses on evaluation methodology, currently on tools for assessing the efficiency of development interventions. As evaluator, he has specialised on theory-based evaluations of complex interventions such as global programmes and public-private development partnerships. He also advises programmes and networks on impact strategies, internal governance arrangements and M&E systems.

Over the last decade, Dr Palenberg has led and conducted more than 30 research and consulting assignments in the public and private sector, including 8 global and regional programme reviews in the last 5 years. Since 2010, he is member of the Programme Management Team of HarvestPlus.

Before founding IfDS in 2008, Dr Palenberg managed the consulting practice at the independent think-tank Global Public Policy Institute (GPPi), Berlin, and has worked in corporate management and as team leader at global management consulting firm, McKinsey&Company, Inc. for several years.

Dr Palenberg holds a PhD in Theoretical Physics and was postdoctoral Humboldt fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA.

Michael Morris, Board member

Michael MorrisDr Michael Morris is a Programme Coordinator in the Agriculture and Rural Development Unit (AFTAR) of the World Bank. He is a member of the team that manages the work of about 100 professionals working on agriculture and rural development throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. In addition to his management responsibilities, he conducts applied research and is actively involved in lending operations. He is the lead author of recent World Bank flagship publications on fertiliser policy and agricultural commercialisation, as well as a contributor to the 2008 World Development Report Agriculture for Development.

Before joining the World Bank in 2004, he served for three years as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Sierra Leone; conducted dissertation field research for two years in Senegal; worked for 16 years in Mexico and Thailand as a scientist and programme director with the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT); and spent one year in Washington, DC, as a Visiting Research Fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Since joining the World Bank, he has served out long term assignments in Washington DC, USA and Antananarivo, Madagascar. During the course of his career, he has been privileged to work in more than 40 developing countries.

His areas of expertise include agricultural strategy and policy formulation, farm-level productivity enhancement, marketing systems and value chain development, agricultural research and technology transfer, institutional strengthening, and capacity building.

Previous board members

Claudio Gonzalez-Vega (2008–2011)

Downloads

icon EB functions (18.4 kB)

The Generation Challenge Programme unites three sets of partners, who – together – make up the GCP Consortium members. The Consortium comprises nine CGIAR centres and 13 non-CGIAR institutes (including four provisional members).

The Consortium was formed to advance the goal of, provide support for, participate in, and encourage expanded support for and participation in the Generation Challenge Programme. This collaborative approach allows GCP partners to tap into a significantly larger collective pool of scientific expertise, funding, information and other resources. The arrangement also allows GCP to conduct research on genetic questions that cut across crop species and thereby apply innovations in one area or commodity to other areas. Investigating traits in one species or plant type may provide vital clues to unlocking similar traits in others.

Each Consortium member appoints a representative to the Consortium Committee (CC). The CC has an independent (non-institutional) Chair, Dave Hoisington.

Interveiw with the Chair of the Consortium Comittee

Full members

Institute Consortium Committee Representative
1 African Centre for Gene Technologies (ACGT, incorporating ARC,CSIR,UoJ, UoP and UoW) John Becker
2 Africa Rice Center (AfricaRice) Marie-Noëlle Ndjiondjop
3 Agropolis (incorporating CIRAD, INRA and IRD) Jean-Louis Pham
4 Bioversity International Elizabeth Arnaud
5 Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS) Ruilian Jing
6 Cornell University Leon Kochian
7 Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (EMBRAPA) Jurandir Magalhães
8 Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT; International Center for Tropical Agriculture) Steve Beebe
9 Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maiz y Trigo (CIMMYT; the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center) Kevin Pixley
10 Centro Intenacional de la Papa (CIP; International Potato Center) Reinhard Simon
11 Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) Swapan Datta
12 International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) Marteen van Ginkel
13 International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) Rajeev K Varshney
14 International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) Hei Leung
15 International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Melaku Gedil
16 John Innes Centre (JIC) John Snape
17 National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences (NIAS-Japan) Hirohiko Hirochika
18 Wagenningen University and Research Centre Fred van Eeuwijk

The GCP Director is an ex-officio member of the Consortium Committee

Provisional members

Institute Consortium Committee Representative
19 Centro de Investigacion y Estudios Avanzados (CINVESTAV), Mexico Victor Villalobos
20 Instituto Agronomico per l'Oltremae (IAO), Italy Giovanni Totino
21 Insitut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Morocco Mohamed Badraoui
22 National Center for Generic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC), Thailand Duangkaew Chongkachornphong

Links and downloads

 icon Amended Consortium Agreement (152.83 kB)

The Intellectual Property Advisory Committee (IPAC) was created by GCP’s Executive Board, to advise the EB on strategic intellectual property (IP) matters, and also on specific issues or problems within GCP related to IP identified either by the EB or by GCP management.

Chair

1.    Shawn Sullivan — law office and general counsel to International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI)

Members

2.    Cecilia Chi-Ham—PIPRA/University of California, Davis, USA
3.    Rose Ndegwa—Texas A&M University, Technology Transfer Office, USA
4.    Tankred Schuhman—Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research, Germnay
5.    Maria Jose (Zeze) Sampaio—EMBRAPA, Brazil

GCP’s Integrated Breeding Platform (IBP) has a Scientific and Management Advisory Committee (SiMAC).

More on SiMAC

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Taskforce

b-tf-members-squareThe Taskforce was constituted in June 2012 as part of a transition plan approved by the Executive Board at its meeting in March that year, and later endorsed by the Consortium Committee in April. The Taskforce comprised of representatives of the Executive Board, the GCP Consortium Committee, the CGIAR Consortium Office, and reinforced with external consultants. The role of the Taskforce was primarily to guide identifying the various research and service products over the Programme's 10-year lifespan, and the possibilities for their post-GCP positioning to assure continued availability, sustainability and impact.

Terms of reference

  • Guide, review and approve the process of identifying the various outputs and products of GCP’s work that are pertinent to the transition process.
  • Evaluate the Postion Papers to be prepared for the different GCP outputs and products, including assessing the post-GCP recommendations provided on each of the outputs and products by the GCP staff team and external advisors.
  • Review institutional options and alternatives that may be suggested to accommodate GCP activities that are proposed to continue after GCP’s closure that may not fit into existing arrangements. This would include advice on appropriate external expertise that may be required to realise these options.
  • Consider possible new and additional activities that could complement the 'homeless' activities mentioned above.
  • If appropriate and necessary, and in co-ordination with the GCP Director, participate in approaches to, and consultations with, stakeholders, funders and partners.
  • Keep the Executive Board and Consortium Committee informed, as appropriate, on deliberations and progress.

Members

 Vivienne Anthony

Vivienne Anthony, Syngenta Foundation

Andrew-Bennett-web-border2

Andrew Bennett, GCP Executive Board (EB) Chair

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Stefania Grando, CGIAR Consoritum Office

Dave Hoisington

Dave Hoisington, GCP Consortium Committee Independent Chair/University of Georgia, USA

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Jurandir Magalhães, EMBRAPA

John-O-Toole-square-web-border 

John O’Toole, Consultant

M-Palenberg-web-170

Markus Palenberg, EB member

Jean-Marcel-Ribaut

Jean-Marcel Ribaut, GCP Director

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