Education
In Plant Genetic Resources (1979) and a Doctor of Philosophy in Plant Biology (1983) from the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. He was also awarded an honorary degree in doctor of Science (Doctor of Science) by his alma mater, Birmingham University, in July 2005.
Career
Born Monty Patrick Jones on February 5, 1951, in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Jones was raised in a middle-class Creole Catholic family. He obtained a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from Njala University College, University of Sierra Leone in 1974, followed by an Master of Science Jones has spent the last 32 years of his career in Africa working in international agricultural research for development institutions.
He began his career at the Rice Research station in Sierra Leone, where he worked as a breeder for 13 years.
His international career started with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research as coordinator of the Institute for Information Technology Advancement/United States Agency for International Development Cameroon rice program from 1987 to 1990. In 1991, Jones moved to the West Africa Rice Development Association (WARDA) now known as AfricaRice Centre, to become its principal breeder.
There, he led the team that successfully crossed the Asian and African rice species (Oryza sativa and Oryza glaberrima), producing the high-yield NERICA variety in collaboration with his fellow African scientists and with other scientists from Asia, Europe and the United States. He then disseminated NERICA through participatory approaches by working at multiple levels of associates from scientists to extension workers and farmers organizations to governments and Non-governmental organizations. Jones’ work on NERICA has increased rice production in Africa and has given savings to many African governments on rice imports.
At the time he left WARDA to join FARA in July 2002, Jones held three offices, first as its Principal Rice Breeder, Rain-federal Program Leader and Deputy Director of Research.
Upon joining FARA as its Executive Secretary (later renamed Executive Director), Jones was actively involved in creating awareness to ensure coordinated efforts in agricultural research for development and increased African ownership in the area of research. He is the immediate past chairperson of Global Forum on Agricultural Research (GFAR). In January 2014 Jones was nominated president of EMRC, a not-for-profit Belgium-based association founded to encourage and facilitate private sector investment in Africa.
Jones replaced Professor Pierre Mathijsen, professor of European Law at the University of Brussels and Managing Partner of the law firm Eurolegal EEIG, who had been at the helm of EMRC for a decade.