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Malta and FAO

Policy Papers & Briefs
Novembro, 2015
Malta
Tunísia
Líbia
Hungria
Itália
Europa

Malta’s partnership with FAO dates back to 1964, the year the country joined the Organization. Cooperation through emergency interventions in the 1970s enabled Malta’s successful eradication of African swine fever. Water management has been another major area of FAO assistance – and one of strategic importance – in the country, with action focusing on sustainable management of Malta’s water resources and development of a national water policy.

Forest-dependent people

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 1996
Mali
Suécia
Canadá
Itália

This issue of Unasylva considers some of the issues related to forest-dwelling and forest-dependent people, and particularly their role in and relationship to sustainable forest management.

Saffron Heritage Site of Kashmir in India. GIAHS Saffron Site Report (part- 1)

Policy Papers & Briefs
Novembro, 2012
Índia
Irã
Ásia

One of the legacies of saffron farming practice for centuries in and around the Pampore Karewas of Kashmir in India is that this ancient farming system continues to inspire family farmers and local communities through their livelihood security that it provides for more than 17,000 farm families. Kashmiri village women contribute to this agriculture heritage site through traditional tilling to flower picking over 3,200 hectares dedicated to the legendary saffron crop cultivation at Pampore.

Children’s property and inheritance rights and their livelihoods: The context of HIV and AIDS in Southern and East Africa

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 2006
Moçambique
Zâmbia
Suécia
Zimbabwe
Namíbia
Essuatíni
Congo
Malawi
Ruanda
Jordânia
Laos
África do Sul
Lesoto
Uganda
Quirguistão
Tanzania
Botswana
Quênia
África
África Oriental
África austral

This paper focuses on legal and institutional aspects of children’s property and inheritance rights in Southern and East Africa. Chapter 2 discusses violations of children’s property and inheritance rights and discusses how the spread of HIV/AIDS has contributed to the violations. Chapter 3 assesses several norms of customary law that aim to protect children’s property and inheritance rights as well as the current practices of customary law that—in the context of the HIV/AIDS pandemic—serve to complicate and limit children’s ability to maintain their rights.

Impacts of the Social Cash Transfer Pilot Programme in Ethiopia

Reports & Research
Março, 2016
Quênia
Gana
Malawi
Zâmbia
Lesoto
Etiópia
Zimbabwe
África

The Social Cash Transfer Pilot Programme (SCTPP) in Ethiopia is the Tigray Regional government’s pilot of a social cash transfer currently managed at the national level. The primary objective of the programme is to improve the quality of lives of orphans and other vulnerable children (OVC), the elderly and persons with disabilities as well as to enhance their access to essential social welfare services such as health care.

Family Farming in the Near East and North Africa

Reports & Research
Outubro, 2016
Argélia
Qatar
Egito
Brasil
Mauritânia
Iraque
Irã
Djibuti
Comores
Jordânia
Marrocos
Iémen
Líbia
Turquia
Somália
Oman
Kuwait
Tunísia
Sudão
Bahrein
Arábia Saudita
Líbano
África
Norte de África

This paper begins by exploring what the term family farming means and how appropriate it is in the NENA region. It will explore more generally the role of farming and agriculture in the broader political economy of the region. The paper establishes the distinctive features of the region, what might be generalised and what might not be so common between countries with contrasting patterns of development.

The broad range of impacts of the Social Cash Transfer Pilot Programme in Ethiopia

Reports & Research
Março, 2016
Quênia
Zâmbia
Lesoto
Zimbabwe
Eritreia
Gana
Malawi
Etiópia
África

This brief describes the broad array of impacts arising from a cash transfer programme that was piloted in the Tigray region of Ethiopia from 2011 to 2014. About 80 percent of Tigray’s population of 4.3 million live in rural areas and depend on rain-fed subsistence agriculture for their livelihoods. Farm families in Tigray tend to have small land holdings and limited productive inputs such as labour, oxen, seeds and fertilizers. Severe drought has repeatedly struck the northern Tigray region and has had a major effect on agricultural productivity.