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IFAD President in the Republic of Korea to discuss joint efforts to eliminate poverty and hunger in the world’s poorest rural areas
Rome, 21 August 2013 –Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), will be in the Republic of Korea 26-28
In China IFAD President Kanayo F. Nwanze will explore broader partnerships for rural poverty eradication
Food security and South-South cooperation high on agenda Rome - Beijing, 19 August 2013 - The President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development
Better evidence, better programmes, better outcomes
Experts and donors harmonize approaches to monitoring and evaluating food security programming Rome, 23 July 2013 – More than 20 food security and nutrition
Remittances can transform rural areas
Making every dollar count Rome, 27 May 2013 – The Global Forum on Remittances jointly organized by the International Fund for Agricultural Development
Press conference at Global Forum on Remittances 2013 - Sending money home to Asia
Launch of first joint IFAD and World Bank remittance report When: Monday 20 May 2013, 12.30 hrs Where: Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand, Penthhouse,
Reaching the poorest through household mentoring
The poorest of the rural poor are always difficult to target, for both IFAD and governments. Often illiterate and isolated, they have such great needs that reaching them on a significant scale remains a challenge.
Agro processing facilities at farmers' doorstep has improved incomes
The Community Agriculture Infrastructure Improvement Programme (CAIIP) is an US$81.9 million programme, co-financed by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the African Development Bank. It is implemented in 35 Districts in Central and Eastern Uganda.
Living up to the challenge of creating market linkages in Mozambique
Trying to create a profitable agricultural market where smallholder farmers were previously involved in subsistence farming is a very difficult task and sometimes an uphill struggle.
Participatory process for road selection becomes a best practice in Mozambique
In rural Mozambique many smallholder farmers are prevented from selling their products to the market because of a lack of good access roads in remote rural areas.
Promoting micro-finance services for the youth
Successfully involving youth in agriculture can be a serious challenge, especially when young people living in remote rural areas are disempowered because of lack of assets and limited economic prospects.
IFAD President in Canada to discuss joint efforts to improve global food and nutrition security
Rome, 11 April 2013 – Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), will be in Canada next week to confer
Stimulating development through a poverty alleviation fund
The Northern Mindanao Community Initiatives and Resource Management Project helped develop the abilities of poor rural communities to play an active role in their own economic and social development. One way the project achieved this was by setting up a poverty alleviation fund in selected municipalities.
The Gambia: Reclaiming the Land
In The Gambia, women often farm on degraded, unproductive land. The more fertile land is usually reserved for men. But things are changing.
Kenya: Growing with the Flow
Like thousands of poor farmers living on the slopes of East Mount Kenya, Christine Mugure Munene used to depend on seasonal rains to water her crops. Now she has water whenever she wants.
Mozambique: Helping fishing communities help themselves
Small-scale fishing communities in Mozambique struggle to eke out a living in remote areas with depleting resources. An IFAD-supported project has helped build artisanal fishers' capacity to improve their livelihoods while reducing pressure on resources, and to link with higher authorities to ensure that their concerns are voiced at the ministerial level.
IFAD adopts comprehensive policy on gender equality – a key to rural development
In rural households throughout the developing world, women and girls work hard each day to protect their families' basic rights to nutrition, health and well-being. Research shows that they comprise 43 per cent of all smallholder farmers and spend an average of 20 per cent more time than men working on agricultural and domestic chores. Yet they have far less control over the land they cultivate or the income they earn.
In Niger, IFAD and partners achieve results against the odds
In many ways, Niger is a country on the edge. Geographically, its productive farmland is confined to a narrow, semi-arid band across the south. Politically, it remains stable in the wake of peaceful elections held last year, but crises in neighbouring Libya, Mali and northern Nigeria have driven thousands of refugees across its borders. Socially and economically, its human development indicators are low, and it is among the poorest nations in the world.
Increasing Gates Foundation and IFAD partnership means more support for smallholder farmers
A statement of intent to build a stronger partnership between the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) means improved support for the world's smallholder farmers.
Beyond the Arab Awakening: Research panel links food security and conflict in the Middle East and North Africa
As popular discontent swept across much of the Arab world over the past year, some observers were puzzled. “How is it,” asked the World Bank’s World Development Report 2011, “that countries in the Middle East and North Africa could face explosions of popular grievances despite, in some cases, sustained high growth and improvement in social indicators?”
Burundi back on its feet: rebuilding after conflict
"When the massacres began in 1993 we were forced to take sides, seeking protection with either the government or the rebels", says Jean-Claude Sindayihebura, who is from Burambi in Bururi province.