
This product is a simple methodology for quantifying the contributions of small farms to local food systems, using key regional indicators and a mixed approach for data/information collection.
The purpose of the Knowledge Bank is to provide insights into various outputs developed in initiatives and projects at the EU and Member States levels concerning data infrastructures and data use. Furthermore, it proposes a quick guide on potential use, showing how these outputs could be used for monitoring and evaluation of the CAP.
By the end of 2021, there are 63 outputs published from 25 projects/initiatives.
You can send new project info and feedback to info@ruralevaluation.eu.
To facilitate better usability of the Evaluation Knowledge Bank please also check out practical examples, presentations of the selected content and other material on the Thematic Working Group 9 webpage.
This product is a simple methodology for quantifying the contributions of small farms to local food systems, using key regional indicators and a mixed approach for data/information collection.
Participatory foresight analysis was used to assess the capacity of small farms and small food businesses to contribute to food and nutrition security under alternative future scenarios for 2030, 2050 to identify the main determinants of their capacity to respond.
The Resilience Assessment Tool (ResAT) assesses the extent to which EU policies and in particular the CAP, influence the resilience of European farming systems.
This is a holistic qualitative approach that aims to assess to what extent and how risk management enables/constrains farming system resilience.
This is a mixed method approach to assess the impact of the Young Farmers payment on structural change.
This is an integrated toolbox that includes a combination of quantitative and qualitative models for impact assessment of resilience strategies/actions on farming systems.
This tool is a web application to evaluate whether the declared land use corresponds with the actual land use. The tool was initially developed to monitor catch crop sites supported by European agricultural funding (CAP).
Agricultural biodiversity trends at the national and regional levels are monitored based on nationwide land-use analysis, insect and other organism trends, and genetic diversity analysis in agriculture.
This tool address important biodiversity monitoring questions related to pollination and insects' ecosystem services and support the evaluation of new agri-environment policies.
This tool aims to facilitate the voluntary participation of farmers and possibly other stakeholders who will be motivated to document biodiversity indicators on farms, be mindful of nature and actively promote biodiversity through agriculture.