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Displaying 1131 - 1140 of 6947Sustain Eco:Sustainability & Inclusion Strategy for Growth Corridors in Tanzania - SUSTAIN: Sustainability and
General
The overall objective of the intervention is to foster ecosystem stewardship in government, business and local communities to equitably balance priorities for sustainability and growth, in other words taking ecosystems into account by all stakeholders while balancing environment and livelihoods. The intervention is largely a capacity building one that provides training, facilitates consultations and provides incentives for the beneficiaries. This will be achieved through three outcomes: Outcome 1: Coordination strengthened amongst governance structures for sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources Outcome 2: Integrated landscape management improves ecosystem health and generates inclusive business and livelihood opportunities, especially for women, youth and vulnerable groups. Outcome 3: Investment in the protection and restoration of ecosystems and their services strengthens climate resilience for people and ecosystems. The impact will be measured via indicators of healthy ecosystems and biodiversity conservation (environmental and biodiversity benefits) and of improved human wellbeing (socio-economic benefits/contribution to multidimensional poverty reduction). The outcomes will be measured through the proportion of land under integrated and inclusive governance and management, area and percentage of targeted landscape with formalized land tenure rights, area and percentage of land under promoted solutions for improved landuse, management and conservation, number and types of innovative business initatives based on sustainable use and management of land and natural resources, area of land under restoration and the volume of investment leveraged for forest and landscape restoration, biodiversity conservation and low carbon projects. The final adjustment of the indicators and establishment of baseline figures will be established during the project inception period.
Objectives
The intervention goal is: Ecosystem stewardship leads to healthy ecosystems, biodiversity conservation and prosperous communities in Tanzania. There are three expected outcomes: Outcome 1: Coordination strengthened amongst governance structures for sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources. Outcome 2: Integrated landscape management improves ecosystem health and generates inclusive business and livelihood opportunities, especially for women, youth and vulnerable groups. Outcome 3: Investment in the protection and restoration of ecosystems and their services strengthens climate resilience for people and ecosystems. Sustain Ecos goal has three principal components: - Ecosystem stewardship For growth to be possible in the long run, the services necessary for human well-being and thriving economies need to be secured and the ecosystems which underpin these services protected and enhanced. Ecosystem stewardship is engaging stakeholders to ensure that ecological systems are able to cope with shocks and stresses as well as to sustain the transformations needed to adapt to climate change whilst striving for social prosperity and growth at scale. - Equitability Local communities are key to ensuring pathways for growth that are sustainable and inclusive. Equitability encompasses community resilience to climate change, social inclusion as well as sustained and sustainable economic growth for local communities, considering poverty in all its dimensions and focusing on leaving no one behind. Equitability also encompasses striving for gender balance and equity in public and private institutions responsible for land and water planning and management. - Balanced sustainability and growth at scale to break the vicious cycle of poverty and ecosystem loss inherent in current economic models, a stark departure from business-as-usual is necessary. For this to be possible, environmental and social considerations must be embedded into businesses and sectors with the highest green growth potential and coupled with replication and scale up of sustainable business models (especially low-emission alternatives). The desired changes are that: Local communities, especially vulnerable women and youth, and smallholder farmers have improved access to knowledge, finance and capacity, being therefore able to derive sustained and sustainable incomes; Businesses in selected sectors integrate ecosystem values and strengthen social inclusion in their operations and value chains; Institutional structures and governance systems have improved coordination and integration enabling sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources; Innovative financing streams recognise the value of Nature-based Solutions for balancing growth with ecosystem resilience and social inclusion, encouraging their uptake; Critically important ecosystems are protected, conserved, and restored thereby retaining the services necessary for economic growth and social prosperity, and the protection of biodiversity including land health (e.g. soils and soil structure, groundwater). The impact will be measured using indicators that are suggested in the project proposal but where the list may be adjusted during the first three months of the project when baselines will also be established. The indicators (see a full list in the logical framework in annex 1 of the proposal) include: - reduction of the total area (ha) and percentage of ecosystems in the landscape that are degraded - reduction of forest loss/rate of deforestation - status of soil and water - changes in household income, data gender disaggregated - diversification of livelihood opportunities - reduction in land and natural resource related conflicts - proportion of land under integrated and inclusive governance and management - total area (ha) and percentage of the landscape with formalized land tenure rights - number and type of integrated local governance structures for natural resources - number of natural resources governance structures for natural resources established and implemented with Sustain Eco support - number of women in leadership roles in natural resource governance mechanisms - individuals supported to obtain Community Custsomary Rights of Occupancy (CCROs) by gender - number of village land use plans that integrate biodiveristy considerations developed and implementation facilited - number of water catchment management plans established/strengthened - number of farmers who have received training and support through farmer field schools and extension services to improve cliamte smart agriculture practices and technologies - number or percentage of local artisans and small businesses using inclusive cook stove technologies - number of businesses and cooperatives supported to implement, monitor and report on Inclusive Green Growth (IGG) principles and best practices - number of farmers engaged in implementing improved agrochemical waste mangement practices - number of banking sector actors and financial institutions engaged in adopting the Tanzania Sustainable Finance Principles - area (ha) and percentage of land in targeted landscape restoration - volume of investment leveraged for forest and landscape restoration, biodiversity conservation and low carbon projects - number of Village Nature Reserve Committees (VNRC) conducting participatory biodiversity monitoring (the Embassy assesses the involvement of local people in such activities key. Offering alternatives to allow people to conserve is also of utmost importance) - number and type of prevention and mitigation measures to address bushfires implemented - number of nurseries and woodlots established - number of communities where members have been supported to engage in communal agroforestry systems and practices - number of Payment for Environmental Services (PES) schemes established and modelled for water use In other words a wide range of results/impacts are expected. It is also likely that people in the landscapes and officials will get hands-on experience of the benefits of democratic governance, transparency and accountability. The ability of the partnership to deliver changes as described in the proposal was confirmed during the Embassy's visit to Sustain 1 in December 2020 where the Embassy could see examples in the Sumbawanga landscape of how consultations between different landusers and local officials in combination with minor infrastructure improvement had resulted in efficient and sustainable use of water that satisfies needs of users both upsteam and downstream without having a negative impact on the environment. During the same visit the Embassy saw examples of how local landuse planning reduced pressure on natural resources and led to conservation of areas of concern from an environmental perspective. Women in the field also explained how they had benefitted from a gender perspective and suggested that one way forward on gender equity would be to raise this topic and seek more interaction with older officials, who based on their experience, are more understanding and receptive.
Sustain Eco:Sustainability & Inclusion Strategy for Growth Corridors in Tanzania
General
The overall objective of the intervention is to foster ecosystem stewardship in government, business and local communities to equitably balance priorities for sustainability and growth, in other words taking ecosystems into account by all stakeholders while balancing environment and livelihoods. The intervention is largely a capacity building one that provides training, facilitates consultations and provides incentives for the beneficiaries. This will be achieved through three outcomes: Outcome 1: Coordination strengthened amongst governance structures for sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources Outcome 2: Integrated landscape management improves ecosystem health and generates inclusive business and livelihood opportunities, especially for women, youth and vulnerable groups. Outcome 3: Investment in the protection and restoration of ecosystems and their services strengthens climate resilience for people and ecosystems. The impact will be measured via indicators of healthy ecosystems and biodiversity conservation (environmental and biodiversity benefits) and of improved human wellbeing (socio-economic benefits/contribution to multidimensional poverty reduction). The outcomes will be measured through the proportion of land under integrated and inclusive governance and management, area and percentage of targeted landscape with formalized land tenure rights, area and percentage of land under promoted solutions for improved landuse, management and conservation, number and types of innovative business initatives based on sustainable use and management of land and natural resources, area of land under restoration and the volume of investment leveraged for forest and landscape restoration, biodiversity conservation and low carbon projects. The final adjustment of the indicators and establishment of baseline figures will be established during the project inception period.
Objectives
The intervention goal is: Ecosystem stewardship leads to healthy ecosystems, biodiversity conservation and prosperous communities in Tanzania. There are three expected outcomes: Outcome 1: Coordination strengthened amongst governance structures for sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources. Outcome 2: Integrated landscape management improves ecosystem health and generates inclusive business and livelihood opportunities, especially for women, youth and vulnerable groups. Outcome 3: Investment in the protection and restoration of ecosystems and their services strengthens climate resilience for people and ecosystems. Sustain Ecos goal has three principal components: - Ecosystem stewardship For growth to be possible in the long run, the services necessary for human well-being and thriving economies need to be secured and the ecosystems which underpin these services protected and enhanced. Ecosystem stewardship is engaging stakeholders to ensure that ecological systems are able to cope with shocks and stresses as well as to sustain the transformations needed to adapt to climate change whilst striving for social prosperity and growth at scale. - Equitability Local communities are key to ensuring pathways for growth that are sustainable and inclusive. Equitability encompasses community resilience to climate change, social inclusion as well as sustained and sustainable economic growth for local communities, considering poverty in all its dimensions and focusing on leaving no one behind. Equitability also encompasses striving for gender balance and equity in public and private institutions responsible for land and water planning and management. - Balanced sustainability and growth at scale to break the vicious cycle of poverty and ecosystem loss inherent in current economic models, a stark departure from business-as-usual is necessary. For this to be possible, environmental and social considerations must be embedded into businesses and sectors with the highest green growth potential and coupled with replication and scale up of sustainable business models (especially low-emission alternatives). The desired changes are that: Local communities, especially vulnerable women and youth, and smallholder farmers have improved access to knowledge, finance and capacity, being therefore able to derive sustained and sustainable incomes; Businesses in selected sectors integrate ecosystem values and strengthen social inclusion in their operations and value chains; Institutional structures and governance systems have improved coordination and integration enabling sustainable and inclusive management of natural resources; Innovative financing streams recognise the value of Nature-based Solutions for balancing growth with ecosystem resilience and social inclusion, encouraging their uptake; Critically important ecosystems are protected, conserved, and restored thereby retaining the services necessary for economic growth and social prosperity, and the protection of biodiversity including land health (e.g. soils and soil structure, groundwater). The impact will be measured using indicators that are suggested in the project proposal but where the list may be adjusted during the first three months of the project when baselines will also be established. The indicators (see a full list in the logical framework in annex 1 of the proposal) include: - reduction of the total area (ha) and percentage of ecosystems in the landscape that are degraded - reduction of forest loss/rate of deforestation - status of soil and water - changes in household income, data gender disaggregated - diversification of livelihood opportunities - reduction in land and natural resource related conflicts - proportion of land under integrated and inclusive governance and management - total area (ha) and percentage of the landscape with formalized land tenure rights - number and type of integrated local governance structures for natural resources - number of natural resources governance structures for natural resources established and implemented with Sustain Eco support - number of women in leadership roles in natural resource governance mechanisms - individuals supported to obtain Community Custsomary Rights of Occupancy (CCROs) by gender - number of village land use plans that integrate biodiveristy considerations developed and implementation facilited - number of water catchment management plans established/strengthened - number of farmers who have received training and support through farmer field schools and extension services to improve cliamte smart agriculture practices and technologies - number or percentage of local artisans and small businesses using inclusive cook stove technologies - number of businesses and cooperatives supported to implement, monitor and report on Inclusive Green Growth (IGG) principles and best practices - number of farmers engaged in implementing improved agrochemical waste mangement practices - number of banking sector actors and financial institutions engaged in adopting the Tanzania Sustainable Finance Principles - area (ha) and percentage of land in targeted landscape restoration - volume of investment leveraged for forest and landscape restoration, biodiversity conservation and low carbon projects - number of Village Nature Reserve Committees (VNRC) conducting participatory biodiversity monitoring (the Embassy assesses the involvement of local people in such activities key. Offering alternatives to allow people to conserve is also of utmost importance) - number and type of prevention and mitigation measures to address bushfires implemented - number of nurseries and woodlots established - number of communities where members have been supported to engage in communal agroforestry systems and practices - number of Payment for Environmental Services (PES) schemes established and modelled for water use In other words a wide range of results/impacts are expected. It is also likely that people in the landscapes and officials will get hands-on experience of the benefits of democratic governance, transparency and accountability. The ability of the partnership to deliver changes as described in the proposal was confirmed during the Embassy's visit to Sustain 1 in December 2020 where the Embassy could see examples in the Sumbawanga landscape of how consultations between different landusers and local officials in combination with minor infrastructure improvement had resulted in efficient and sustainable use of water that satisfies needs of users both upsteam and downstream without having a negative impact on the environment. During the same visit the Embassy saw examples of how local landuse planning reduced pressure on natural resources and led to conservation of areas of concern from an environmental perspective. Women in the field also explained how they had benefitted from a gender perspective and suggested that one way forward on gender equity would be to raise this topic and seek more interaction with older officials, who based on their experience, are more understanding and receptive.
In-depth portfolio review; Goals 2.1 and 2.3
General
In-depth portfolio review of two goals within the global strategy for sustainable economic development linked to sustainable ownership and land rights as well as sustainable food systems. The review aims to review possible revisions and contributions to sharpen the portfolio.
Sustainable Use of Natural Resources for Environment and Econ. Dev.-SUNREED - Mid-term review for the SUNREED
General
The overall objective of the concept proposal “Sustainable Use of Natural Resources for Environment and Economic Development, shortly SUNREED” is to increase the sustainable use of private forest resources and value chain development on renewable energy based on wood biomass (district heating system) that will generate a higher volume of forest goods and income opportunities to rural households. The project proposals goal will be achieved through the following two outcomes: Outcome 1: Private forest owners have increased value and sustainability of the forest stand ecosystems. Outcome 2: Value chains actors have increased wood biomass production, processing and final use. The implementing partner is CNVP Foundation. The project will be focused on addressing key constraint faced by the private forest owners and provide support to them in collecting evidence and advocating for policy and legal changes with public institutions in favor of private forestry.
Objectives
The overall objective of the program is: Poverty reduction for both women and men in forest areas through additional income and jobs from sustainably managed forests including wood biomass, Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs), Non-Wood Forest Product (NWFPs) and carbon backed up by an enabling policy environment and supported by sustainable service provision by National Association of Private Forest Owners (NAPFO) and Association of Private Forest Owners (APFOs). To reach this objective the following outputs and outcomes have been proposed: Outcome 1: Increased incomes for Private Forest Owners (PFO) including women as a result of improved forest management and engagement in NWFP / MAP market systems There are 4 outputs that relate to this outcome: Output 1.1: Increased and diversified production from sustainably managed forest land; Output 1.2: Enhanced and sustainable service delivery by APFOs and the NAPFO to their members; Output 1.3: Women and youth living in rural areas engaged in forest-related market systems; Output 1.4: Enabling policy environment promoted, including a road-map for developing a carbon market. Outcome 2: A market system for wood biomass (wood chips), providing incentives for proper forest management and income generation for PFOs, and leading to reduced greenhouse gas impact Interventions that will lead to the realisation of this outcome can be grouped into 4 key outputs: Output 2.1: Output 2.1 Development of a national roadmap on wood biomass production, marketing and use Output 2.2: Establishment of four pilot wood biomass collection points supported; Output 2.3: At least 10 heating systems based on wood biomass promoted; Output 2.4: Increased information, capacities and learning on wood biomass market systems.
Sustainable Use of Natural Resources for Environment and Econ. Dev.-SUNREED - CNVP Sustainable Use of Natural
General
The overall objective of the concept proposal “Sustainable Use of Natural Resources for Environment and Economic Development, shortly SUNREED” is to increase the sustainable use of private forest resources and value chain development on renewable energy based on wood biomass (district heating system) that will generate a higher volume of forest goods and income opportunities to rural households. The project proposals goal will be achieved through the following two outcomes: Outcome 1: Private forest owners have increased value and sustainability of the forest stand ecosystems. Outcome 2: Value chains actors have increased wood biomass production, processing and final use. The implementing partner is CNVP Foundation. The project will be focused on addressing key constraint faced by the private forest owners and provide support to them in collecting evidence and advocating for policy and legal changes with public institutions in favor of private forestry.
Objectives
The overall objective of the program is: Poverty reduction for both women and men in forest areas through additional income and jobs from sustainably managed forests including wood biomass, Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs), Non-Wood Forest Product (NWFPs) and carbon backed up by an enabling policy environment and supported by sustainable service provision by National Association of Private Forest Owners (NAPFO) and Association of Private Forest Owners (APFOs). To reach this objective the following outputs and outcomes have been proposed: Outcome 1: Increased incomes for Private Forest Owners (PFO) including women as a result of improved forest management and engagement in NWFP / MAP market systems There are 4 outputs that relate to this outcome: Output 1.1: Increased and diversified production from sustainably managed forest land; Output 1.2: Enhanced and sustainable service delivery by APFOs and the NAPFO to their members; Output 1.3: Women and youth living in rural areas engaged in forest-related market systems; Output 1.4: Enabling policy environment promoted, including a road-map for developing a carbon market. Outcome 2: A market system for wood biomass (wood chips), providing incentives for proper forest management and income generation for PFOs, and leading to reduced greenhouse gas impact Interventions that will lead to the realisation of this outcome can be grouped into 4 key outputs: Output 2.1: Output 2.1 Development of a national roadmap on wood biomass production, marketing and use Output 2.2: Establishment of four pilot wood biomass collection points supported; Output 2.3: At least 10 heating systems based on wood biomass promoted; Output 2.4: Increased information, capacities and learning on wood biomass market systems.
Interpeace - Peacebuilding through reconciliation and inclusive governance - Peacebuilding through reconciliat
General
Interpeace has submitted a concept note to the Embassy of Sweden, that falls under objective three of the current Swedish strategy for cooperation with DRC (2021-2025) concerning Peaceful, inclusive and sustainable societies. It aims for the local, provincial and national authorities in DRC to lead, supervise, and facilitate inclusive peacebuilding processes and promote sustainably. The project will work on the recommendations from the EU-funded study carried out by Interpeace in 2020 in Kasai and Kasai Central to enhance horizontal (between citizens, communities and social groups) and vertical (between the latter and authorities, formal and informal, and at local, provincial and national level), through increased participation, communication, understanding, trust and collaboration. This is only possible if some policies can be improved and don't function as triggers or amplifiers of conflicts. Ongoing analysis will be put in place to reveal discriminatory and non-transparent facts and policies that are dividing factors at the community level and/or between communities and state institutions. To achieve this, Interpeace plans to build on government leadership and ownership to achieve results in a sustainable manner. The larger assumption is that peacebuilding efforts often fail to produce lasting results because they lack the support, involvement and backing of the highest levels of government. This has an impact on the confidence and commitment of stakeholders in peace processes. This means that identifying the reforms and decisions necessary to tackle the drivers of conflict cannot be negotiated. Thus, it is necessary to engage the DRC government in a coherent, constructive and innovative manner in order to contribute to effective governance for peace. Among the concerns that have remained unanswered for a long time are the issue of governance of the security and justice sectors, the securing of land rights by communities, equitable and sustainable access to spaces and natural resources for the promotion of economic development. and social, and the fight against corruption. The project will be implement in 4 provinces, namely Kasaï, Kasaï central, Mai-Ndombe and Kinshasa. It is important to point out that the violent conflict in Kasai and Kasai Central between 2016 and 2018 began with clashes between supporters of a customary chief and the police and then turned into generalized violence between communities, customary chiefs, authorities and law enforcement. The conflict in Yumbi was an intercommunity clash between the Banunu and Batende linked to customary power and land conflicts.
Objectives
The main goal of this project is to stimulate the will, capacity and relations of authorities at all levels to meet the complex challenges of peace in the provinces of Kasaï, Kasaï Central and Yumbi and even in all the DRC. This will set the preconditions for structural changes that must translate into new attitudes and practices of governance for peace. The project is based on an observation that in the current fragile situation - despite this kind of stability, where the interests of the people and the institutions don't match, it will be difficult to ensure the active participation of state actors to invest in participatory governance which is the main guarantee for sustainable peace. This project will focus on the Kasai and Yumbi region, in order to reduce violence in the communities to the state actors but also to support peacebuilding efforts relying on a conflict scan before undertaking any specific initiative in the communities. Through this option, research and analysis, combined with capacity building, will create the building blocks to change governance as a channel of peacebuilding in a more structural way. In addition, the present rulers of the DRC are focusing on the next elections in 2023. The opportunity should be offered to mobilize political actors around the culture of peace and to bring together the authorities, communities and civil society to lay the foundations for peaceful elections. The overall objective of the project is to contribute to strengthened inclusive peace governance by state actors and non-state actors in the DRC, particularly in Kasai, Kasai Central, Mai-Ndombe and at the national level. The specific objectives of this intervention are to: Outcome 1: Increased understanding of peace governance by government and non-government actors ;Outcome 2: Increased capacity for peacebuilding governance among government and non-government actors ;Outcome 3: Enhanced inclusive peace governance at the provincial level ;Outcome 4: Improved framework for peace governance at the national level ;
FAO/ECOWAS, 2019-2023 Global Transformation of Forests for People and Climate
General
FAO has asked Sida for funding of 75,000,000 SEK to carry out the project named "Global transformation of Forests for People and Climate: A Focus on West Africa " during the period 2019 – 2023. The intervention builds on FAO’s existing support in the ECOWAS region and targets on three priority focus areas, namely Knowledge of the state of forest ecosystem dynamics; Forest and land related laws, policies and strategies at the sub-regional level; and Demonstration and dissemination of sustainable forest and land use practices. These focus areas were identified in the Convergence Plan endorsed by member states of ECOWAS. The expected overall results encompass all ECOWAS member countries while specific outputs and activities refer to a selection of countries that show similar ecological characteristics and challenges. ECOWAS is a key partner for implementation of the intervention together with forestry and environmental units in government agencies, NGOs and CSOs concerned with forests and land use, Indigenous peoples and local communities who reside in or near forested areas, and academia and research institutions. Based on the request from ECOWAS so as to formally report on the contribution of Sweden in the region, ECOWAS and Sweden will sign MoU in support of this project. Sida and FAO will sign a separate Contribution Agreement, under the existing FAO-SIDA Framework Agreement, signed in 2017. During the inception phase of the project, outstanding issues will be clarified and agreed upon between the partners.
Objectives
The overall objective of the contribution is to strengthen decision-making on forests and land management, and to strengthen capacity at a sub-regional level through ECOWAS and other sub-regional partners to implement elements of the regionally agreed plan called the Convergence Plan. Achieving this objective will positively contribute to the livelihoods and climate change resilience thus contributes to the achievement of the SDGs and the Paris Agreement, identified as the broader impact. In addition, identifying lessons learned and best practice will contribute to a longer-term impact through sharing in other sub-regions and globally. This intervention builds on FAO’s existing support in the region and targets three priority focus areas of the Convergence Plan, around which all the project outputs are clustered (Knowledge of the state of forest ecosystem dynamics; Forest and land related laws, policies and strategies at the sub-regional level; and Demonstration and dissemination of sustainable forest and land use practices). The expected overall results encompass all ECOWAS member countries while specific outputs and activities refer to a selection of countries that show similar ecological characteristics and challenges.
FAO/ECOWAS, 2019-2023 Global Transformation of Forests for People and Climate
General
FAO has asked Sida for funding of 75,000,000 SEK to carry out the project named "Global transformation of Forests for People and Climate: A Focus on West Africa " during the period 2019 – 2023. The intervention builds on FAO’s existing support in the ECOWAS region and targets on three priority focus areas, namely Knowledge of the state of forest ecosystem dynamics; Forest and land related laws, policies and strategies at the sub-regional level; and Demonstration and dissemination of sustainable forest and land use practices. These focus areas were identified in the Convergence Plan endorsed by member states of ECOWAS. The expected overall results encompass all ECOWAS member countries while specific outputs and activities refer to a selection of countries that show similar ecological characteristics and challenges. ECOWAS is a key partner for implementation of the intervention together with forestry and environmental units in government agencies, NGOs and CSOs concerned with forests and land use, Indigenous peoples and local communities who reside in or near forested areas, and academia and research institutions. Based on the request from ECOWAS so as to formally report on the contribution of Sweden in the region, ECOWAS and Sweden will sign MoU in support of this project. Sida and FAO will sign a separate Contribution Agreement, under the existing FAO-SIDA Framework Agreement, signed in 2017. During the inception phase of the project, outstanding issues will be clarified and agreed upon between the partners.
Objectives
The overall objective of the contribution is to strengthen decision-making on forests and land management, and to strengthen capacity at a sub-regional level through ECOWAS and other sub-regional partners to implement elements of the regionally agreed plan called the Convergence Plan. Achieving this objective will positively contribute to the livelihoods and climate change resilience thus contributes to the achievement of the SDGs and the Paris Agreement, identified as the broader impact. In addition, identifying lessons learned and best practice will contribute to a longer-term impact through sharing in other sub-regions and globally. This intervention builds on FAO’s existing support in the region and targets three priority focus areas of the Convergence Plan, around which all the project outputs are clustered (Knowledge of the state of forest ecosystem dynamics; Forest and land related laws, policies and strategies at the sub-regional level; and Demonstration and dissemination of sustainable forest and land use practices). The expected overall results encompass all ECOWAS member countries while specific outputs and activities refer to a selection of countries that show similar ecological characteristics and challenges.
Maps for good land governance
General
Expected impact of the project is sustainable land management and improved security of tenure for economic and social development of Ukraine. Expected outcomes are new maps in use for land use management and land planning, surveying of parcel boundaries by GPS technology.
Local Development through social models - Honduras
General
Civil Society Organizations are agents of change. Partner organizations and participants will be trained in advocacy and strengthen management capacity. The end goal will be to have local organisations and communities advocating for better policies and services ton agriculture, land rights, environment, forest management, etc. Focus is given to those in most vulnerable situations, such as women headed households, pregnant, lactating and women of childbearing age, children and youth, and people living with disabilities.