Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture

Knowledge management

IICA and CREFAL strengthen partnership to benefit community development

Tiempo de lectura: 3 mins.

Authorities from the two international organizations met in Costa Rica to evaluate the joint work they have carried out to enhance capacities in the hemisphere.

Mercedes Calderón, Director General of CREFAL (left); Emilio Coral, Technical Director of CREFAL; and José Antonio Araníbar, CREFAL Liaison for Costa Rica. 

San Jose, 18 September 2015 (IICA). A delegation from the Regional Cooperation Center for Adult Education in Latin America and the Caribbean (CREFAL) visited the headquarters of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) in Costa Rica to consolidate their strategy for supporting community development in Latin America and the Caribbean.

The institutions signed a collaboration agreement in August to drive projects in this area. One of the actions promoted was the creation of a diploma course entitled “Public policies in agriculture: fundamentals, analysis and application.”

100 professionals from 20 countries in the Americas are participating in the course, which is being taught online and will last four months.

“Both IICA and CREFAL have a large international network; by working together, we can share knowledge, training opportunities and human resources, all with the goal of empowering future professionals in the agricultural sector,” explained Lloyd Day, Deputy Director General of IICA.

The entities will also prepare a land use planning manual and will develop proposals for improving communication with local governments in the hemisphere.

“These agreements strengthen us and allow us to be on the same page as far as work topics are concerned; we can strengthen our synergies to impact communities with good results,” stated Mercedes Calderón, Director General of CREFAL.

CREFAL is an international organization specializing in the development of learning models and proposals, that seeks to disseminate up-to-date knowledge to bolster the capacities of professors and academic institutions.

More information:

miguel.arvelo@iica.int

 

Share

Related news​

San José

December 2, 2025

More than 50 experts from 24 countries in the Americas explored AI’s potential to transform agricultural health systems and streamline trade

At a three-day technical workshop convened by IICA and the Standards and Trade Development Facility (STDF).

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins

Canadá

November 28, 2025

Mackenzie Fingerhut, a young Canadian farmer who grows grains, invests in the future and cares for the environment, recognized by IICA as a Leader of Rurality of the Americas

In addition to producing grains, Mackenzie Fingerhut’s work is aimed at preserving and improving soil through crop rotation, direct seeding, biological inputs and continuous analysis to determine water infiltration levels, biological activity and carbon content.

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins

San José

November 28, 2025

“Más campo, menos mitos”, the IICA publication that highlights the essence of the Argentine agriculture sector and its contribution to development

The publication explains why Argentina’s rural areas are important and how they influence daily life, dealing with everything from photosynthesis to exports, including meat, soybeans, wheat, wine and other agricultural products.

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins