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Pro-Poor Policy Options: Farmer Organizations in Cambodia








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    Pro-Poor Policy Options: Strengthening District-Level Agricultural Service Delivery in Cambodia 2011
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    This policy brief calls for Cambodia’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) to renew its commitment to agricultural extension and prioritize farmers’ needs by reviewing and revising MAFF’s policy environment. Moreover, institutional links between extension stakeholders (including farmers, all relevant departments of MAFF, private sector actors, and other concerned ministries) must be formalized, research-extension links improved, and the extension system reoriented to be more b usiness-focused.
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    Pro-Poor Policy Options: Agricultural Land use in Cambodia 2011
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    This policy brief suggests that creating an enabling policy environment as well as prioritizing land assessment and strategic directions for land management are important steps for more productive use of agricultural land resources and improved livelihoods of the poor in Cambodia.
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    Pro-Poor Policy Options: Marginal Farmers, the Rural Landless, Women and Youths in Nepal 2011
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    This policy brief looks at the most marginalized and disadvantaged section of Nepalese society, people who are ultra poor, severely undernourished and chronically food insecure. They have long been excluded from mainstream development efforts – indeed even excluded from the communities in which they reside. Recent political developments in Nepal, particularly a new interim constitution which expressly acknowledges that the marginalized people have the same rights as all other citizens, provides an opportune moment to address the issues relating to them. The paper advocates adopting a livelihoods approach to the formulation of policies for these disadvantaged segments of Nepalese society.

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