Yvonne Pinto
About
Yvonne Pinto has a long career focused mainly on technology generation, innovation ecosystems, and international development. Yvonne began her early career in agricultural research and academia followed by 15 years in private philanthropy, creating and implementing investments in agriculture, enterprise, finance, and education, including the establishment of successful institutions, particularly in Africa.
She has worked collaboratively with governments, UN agencies, international NGOs, the private sector, bilateral and multilateral donors (including the UK government), and independent private foundations.
She has worked respectfully to challenge them to think differently and to measure and evaluate the effectiveness of their work – always with an emphasis on robust evidence and an openness to a diversity of views. Her experience has ranged from working towards solutions to some of the most intractable disease problems facing African agriculture to understanding the successful elements of digital economies and technology ecosystems at the policy- and practice-level, globally. She has a keen interest in big data and its interface with science and sustainability in the bio-revolution that is upon us.
Education
Yvonne has a BSc in Plant Sciences and Agriculture from Reading University, an MSc in Biotechnology and a Ph.D. in Virology from Imperial College, and a General Management Executive Education from Cambridge University.
Publications
- IDS Bulletin: People-centered M&E: Aligning Incentives So Agriculture Does More to Reduce Hunger. Edited by: Lawrence Haddad, David Bonbright, Johanna Lindstrom, Yvonne Pinto and Efe Atugba
November 2010, Volume 41 Issue 6
https://bulletin.ids.ac.uk/index.php/idsbo/issue/view/40
- With Pretty, J., et. al. (2010) The Top 100 Questions of Importance to the Future of Global Agriculture, International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 8(4) pp 219–236, Earthscan.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.3763/ijas.2010.0534
- With Njenga, M. (2011) Commentary: Building Science and Leadership Skills in African Women in Agricultural Research and Development, International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, Taylor and Francis.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14735903.2011.607609
- Assessment of the Relevance, Quality and Utility of Agricultural Science and Technology Indicators (ASTI) Policy Data and Analyses for Phase
II (2012-2014). Charles Ooko Onyango, Yuko Suwa & Dr Yvonne Pinto, October 2,2014.
https://www.asti.cgiar.org/pdf/ASTI-Phase-2-Evaluation.pdf