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NewsletterFAO Rwanda Newsletter 1st quarter 2018 - Issue#1, Volume 4
Building the resilience of smallholder farmers towards ending hunger and poverty
2018Also available in:
No results found.The FAO Rwanda Newsletter 1st quarter 2018 - Issue#1 disseminate information on the activities of the organization. It aims to build regular communication with FAO-Rwanda’s government, development, and community partners, offer valuable updates on projects that the reader will find informative and useful and provide success stories that inspire the public and illustrate FAO-Rwanda’s efficacy and transparency. FAO launched the use of pheromone traps and lures to help farmers in the fight against Fall Army Worm; Women involved fishing in Rusizi district were given training to improve their business and incomes and through the land restoration and sustainable food and agriculture, farmers in Rulindo were given seedlings and a market to facilitate sell of their produce. -
NewsletterFAO Malawi Newsletter, Biannual 2019 - Issue #1 2019
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No results found.FAO Malawi newsletter is an online publication that provides a snapshot view of activities that are carried out under the various projects that the country programme is implementing in collaboration with the government of Malawi. It will be distributed primarily to internal stakeholders and some external partners within government, the UN and the donor community. -
FactsheetBoosting Food Security and Nutrition in Ghana and Malawi - GCP/RAF/480/GER 2020
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No results found.The Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme provides the framework in Africa within which sector reviews, expenditure reviews and investment planning related to agriculture and, increasingly, food security and nutrition, are undertaken. In order to ensure efficiency of resource allocation, assistance is needed to strengthen capacities for effective mobilization and use of resources for food security and nutrition, in particular in the development, implementation and monitoring of National Agricultural Investment Plans. In this context, the project was designed to address a number of key issues in Ghana and Malawi. These included insufficient human and institutional capacity to track and analyse resource flows to food security and nutrition, inadequate capacity to negotiate and facilitate public-private partnerships to attract domestic private investment, inadequate stakeholder engagement of diverse non-state actors, the private sector and civil society in policy, as well as political and accountability processes and mechanisms for food security and nutrition.
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