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Interactions between the agricultural sector and the HIV/AIDS pandemic: Implications for agricultural policy








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    Policy brief
    Bridging the gender gap in the agriculture and rural sector of Ghana: Implications for policy and programming
    Policy brief for Ghana
    2025
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    FAO’s 2024 gender assessment of Ghana’s agriculture and rural development sector reveals persistent gender disparities despite national commitments to equality. Key findings show that sector programs have yet to align with global gender integration frameworks. Gender units in relevant ministries lack adequate resources, particularly at decentralized levels.Female-headed households face higher food insecurity, and women’s limited access to finance restricts their participation in high-value segments of crop, livestock, and fisheries value chains. Social norms further constrain women’s roles, especially in fisheries. Although legal protections for women’s land rights exist, customary systems hinder ownership and decision-making. Women also face limited access to extension services due to workload and social norms.The report calls for targeted policy and programmatic actions by government agencies, development partners, and civil society to close gender gaps in agrifood systems and enhance women’s economic empowerment.
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    Brochure
    Agriculture-charcoal interactions as determinants of deforestation rates: Implications for REDD+ design in Zambia 2015
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    This policy brief addresses the question of the economic drivers of both deforestation and forest degradation (DD) in Zambia. It develops a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario to support reference levels for greenhouse gas (GHC) emissions. The relative contributions to DD of the two largest proximate drivers of deforestation in Zambia, charcoal production and agriculture, are predicted under different scenarios over the 2015-2022 period. Possible ways of reducing land use change (LUC) are examined using an economy-wide model capturing Zambia’s different agro-ecological regions (AERs). The model assumes that forests used for unsustainable charcoal production are degraded, or can be in part converted to land for agriculture use. However, land can also be deforested directly for agricultural use without going through charcoal production. The brief concludes that concerted action on both the supply and demand sides is crucial to the success of the national strategy for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries (REDD+).

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