updated: 12.05.08
pattern
Dry Zone Livelihood Support and Partnership Programme

There is a high concentration of poverty in these arid districts, where many people have little or no land. The project enables poor rural people to improve their incomes and living conditions sustainably through increased access to land and water resources, services, technologies and market linkages.

The project benefits small-scale farmers and, particularly young households and households headed by women, in which there is a chronic shortage of productive members. The project design is flexible and can adapt to changing priorities as it goes forward. Participatory planning, a basic feature of activities, includes a participatory assessment of constraints in rainfed and irrigated farming, from production to marketing. In farmer field schools, participants develop solutions that they disseminate to individual farmers. Project activities, such as tank rehabilitation and infrastructure development, are demand-driven. Women have a voice in activities, particularly in the self-managed savings and credit schemes that enable them to improve their incomes and provide better food and care for their families.

Source: IFAD

In this section
Contact information
Mr Sana Jatta
Country programme manager
IFAD
Via Paolo di Dono, 44
00142 Rome, Italy
Tel: +39 0654592446
Fax: +39 0654593446
s.jatta@ifad.org
Facts and figures

Total cost: US$30.4 million

IFAD loan: US$22.0 million

IFAD grant:
US$339,000

Geographical area: Anuradhapura, Badulla, Kurunegala and Moneragala districts

Directly benefiting: 80,000 households

Status: ongoing

Partners

Canadian International Development Agency

Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC)

United Nations Development Programme

World Food Programme

World Bank