Four webinars were held on the Methodological introduction to broad-based rapid assessment of national-level food systems: 21/09/2020 - 09:00 ; 21/09/2020 - 15:00 ; 25/09/2020 - 09:00 ; 25/09/2020 - 15:00
Ethiopian Experience in Irrigatiion Development by Mr. Zena Habtewold BiruMalabo-Montpellier-Panel
The Ethiopian irrigation success story was the focus of the webinar organised by the Malabo Montpellier Panel on 14th February 2019, based on their second report, Water-Wise: Smart Irrigation Strategies for Africa, which summarizes the key findings of a systematic analysis of what six African countries at the forefront of progress on irrigation have done right: Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Morocco, Niger and South Africa.
The guest speaker and author of this presentation, Mr. Zena Habtewold Biru, Director of the Planning Monitoring and Evaluation Directorate at the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) and Focal Person for the Comprehensive African Agricultural Development Program (CAADP) discussed the case of Ethiopia’s remarkable growth in irrigation expansion over the last years, and the concrete practical steps that the government took to become one of the leading African countries in terms of agricultural irrigation, thereby reducing unemployment, poverty rate and malnutrition.
During the seminar Mr. Zena Habtewold Biru discussed the following questions:
•What did Ethiopia do differently?
•What are the main institutional innovations?
•What are the key policy measures?
•What are the country’s major programs and interventions?
•How and what did it take to mobilize the government to uptake strong regulatory frameworks that govern irrigation and the use of water in agriculture?
•What are the practical lessons for other Africans to learn from and to adapt to the context of their own countries?
Four webinars were held on the Methodological introduction to broad-based rapid assessment of national-level food systems: 21/09/2020 - 09:00 ; 21/09/2020 - 15:00 ; 25/09/2020 - 09:00 ; 25/09/2020 - 15:00
Ethiopian Experience in Irrigatiion Development by Mr. Zena Habtewold BiruMalabo-Montpellier-Panel
The Ethiopian irrigation success story was the focus of the webinar organised by the Malabo Montpellier Panel on 14th February 2019, based on their second report, Water-Wise: Smart Irrigation Strategies for Africa, which summarizes the key findings of a systematic analysis of what six African countries at the forefront of progress on irrigation have done right: Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Morocco, Niger and South Africa.
The guest speaker and author of this presentation, Mr. Zena Habtewold Biru, Director of the Planning Monitoring and Evaluation Directorate at the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) and Focal Person for the Comprehensive African Agricultural Development Program (CAADP) discussed the case of Ethiopia’s remarkable growth in irrigation expansion over the last years, and the concrete practical steps that the government took to become one of the leading African countries in terms of agricultural irrigation, thereby reducing unemployment, poverty rate and malnutrition.
During the seminar Mr. Zena Habtewold Biru discussed the following questions:
•What did Ethiopia do differently?
•What are the main institutional innovations?
•What are the key policy measures?
•What are the country’s major programs and interventions?
•How and what did it take to mobilize the government to uptake strong regulatory frameworks that govern irrigation and the use of water in agriculture?
•What are the practical lessons for other Africans to learn from and to adapt to the context of their own countries?
Social Protection and Agriculture for Food Security: Breaking the Cycle of Po...Pascal Corbé
Benjamin Davis, Strategic Programme Leader, Rural Poverty Reduction at FAO, presents at GIZ workshop "Agriculture Meets Social Protection: How can food and nutrition security benefit?", Eschborn, 7 July 2016
ICN2-Food Value Chain Transformations in Developing Countries: Nutritional Im...FAO
Food Value Chain Transformations in Developing Countries: Nutritional Implications
Miguel I. Gómez and Katie Ricketts
Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
Cornell University
Joint FAO/WHO Second International Conference on Nutrition (ICN2)
Food Assistance and Institutional Demand: Supporting Smallholder Farmers to F...UNDP Policy Centre
Presented at The State of Food and Agriculture 2015 (SOFA) workshop held at FAO's headquarters in Rome on July 1st, 2014. The presentation explained the concept of Institutional Demand as a feature of Social Protection that links agricultural producers with local and assured local/regional markets. Institutional demand primarily consists of state purchases of produce from smallholder farmers that is then distributed through social protection networks (community kitchens, food banks, schools, etc) to fight hunger.
IFPRI's flagship report reviews the major food policy issues, developments, and decisions of 2017, and highlights challenges and opportunities for 2018 at the global and regional levels. This year's report looks at the impacts of greater global integration—including the movement of goods, investment, people, and knowledge—and the threat of current antiglobalization pressures. Drawing on recent research, IFPRI researchers and other distinguished food policy experts consider a range of timely topics:
■ How can the global food system deliver food security for all in the face of the radical changes taking place today?
■ What is the role of trade in improving food security, nutrition, and sustainability?
■ How can international investment best contribute to local food security and better food systems in developing countries?
■ Do voluntary and involuntary migration increase or decrease food security in source countries and host countries?
■ What opportunities does greater data availability open up for improving agriculture and food security?
■ How does reform of developed-country farm support policies affect global food security?
■ How can global governance structures better address problems of food security and nutrition?
■ What major trends and events affected food security and nutrition across the globe in 2017?
The 2018 Global Food Policy Report also presents data tables and visualizations for several key food policy indicators, including country-level data on hunger, agricultural spending and research investment, and projections for future agricultural production and consumption. In addition to illustrative figures, tables, and a timeline of food policy events in 2017, the report includes the results of a global opinion poll on globalization and the current state of food policy.
Social protection, agriculture and the From Protection to Production projectFAO
http://www.fao.org/economic/PtoP/en/
Presented during the From Protection to Production project workshop, 24-25 September 2013, FAO HQ.
The From Protection to Production (PtoP) project is a multi-country impact evaluation of cash transfers in sub-Saharan Africa. The project is a collaborative effort between the FAO, the UNICEF Eastern and Southern Africa Regional Office and the governments of Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Project activities are mainly funded by the Regular Fund, the DFID Research and Evidence Division and the EU.
Social Protection and Its Impact on Food and Nutrition SecurityPascal Corbé
Food and Nutrition Security and Social Protection
Lessons Learned, Trends and Conclusions for German Development Cooperation
Gained on Missions to Ethiopia, Cambodia & Malawi
By Elke Kasmann, Martina Kress, Ines Reinhard, Annette Roth of GIZ
Held at Event: Agriculture Meets Social Protection: How can food and nutrition security benefit?
7 July 2016
This webinar from the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM) was held by Eduardo Nakasone (International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)/Michigan State University) on May 8, 2018. The presentation also includes results of the application of the new method in the value chains of maize and beans (in Guatemala and Honduras), teff (in Ethiopia), wheat (in China), and potatoes (in Ecuador and Peru). We also discussed ongoing work to assess interventions to reduce loss. Full recording and more information available at http://bit.ly/FoodLossWebinar
Social Protection and Agriculture for Food Security: Breaking the Cycle of Po...Pascal Corbé
Benjamin Davis, Strategic Programme Leader, Rural Poverty Reduction at FAO, presents at GIZ workshop "Agriculture Meets Social Protection: How can food and nutrition security benefit?", Eschborn, 7 July 2016
ICN2-Food Value Chain Transformations in Developing Countries: Nutritional Im...FAO
Food Value Chain Transformations in Developing Countries: Nutritional Implications
Miguel I. Gómez and Katie Ricketts
Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
Cornell University
Joint FAO/WHO Second International Conference on Nutrition (ICN2)
Food Assistance and Institutional Demand: Supporting Smallholder Farmers to F...UNDP Policy Centre
Presented at The State of Food and Agriculture 2015 (SOFA) workshop held at FAO's headquarters in Rome on July 1st, 2014. The presentation explained the concept of Institutional Demand as a feature of Social Protection that links agricultural producers with local and assured local/regional markets. Institutional demand primarily consists of state purchases of produce from smallholder farmers that is then distributed through social protection networks (community kitchens, food banks, schools, etc) to fight hunger.
IFPRI's flagship report reviews the major food policy issues, developments, and decisions of 2017, and highlights challenges and opportunities for 2018 at the global and regional levels. This year's report looks at the impacts of greater global integration—including the movement of goods, investment, people, and knowledge—and the threat of current antiglobalization pressures. Drawing on recent research, IFPRI researchers and other distinguished food policy experts consider a range of timely topics:
■ How can the global food system deliver food security for all in the face of the radical changes taking place today?
■ What is the role of trade in improving food security, nutrition, and sustainability?
■ How can international investment best contribute to local food security and better food systems in developing countries?
■ Do voluntary and involuntary migration increase or decrease food security in source countries and host countries?
■ What opportunities does greater data availability open up for improving agriculture and food security?
■ How does reform of developed-country farm support policies affect global food security?
■ How can global governance structures better address problems of food security and nutrition?
■ What major trends and events affected food security and nutrition across the globe in 2017?
The 2018 Global Food Policy Report also presents data tables and visualizations for several key food policy indicators, including country-level data on hunger, agricultural spending and research investment, and projections for future agricultural production and consumption. In addition to illustrative figures, tables, and a timeline of food policy events in 2017, the report includes the results of a global opinion poll on globalization and the current state of food policy.
Social protection, agriculture and the From Protection to Production projectFAO
http://www.fao.org/economic/PtoP/en/
Presented during the From Protection to Production project workshop, 24-25 September 2013, FAO HQ.
The From Protection to Production (PtoP) project is a multi-country impact evaluation of cash transfers in sub-Saharan Africa. The project is a collaborative effort between the FAO, the UNICEF Eastern and Southern Africa Regional Office and the governments of Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Project activities are mainly funded by the Regular Fund, the DFID Research and Evidence Division and the EU.
Social Protection and Its Impact on Food and Nutrition SecurityPascal Corbé
Food and Nutrition Security and Social Protection
Lessons Learned, Trends and Conclusions for German Development Cooperation
Gained on Missions to Ethiopia, Cambodia & Malawi
By Elke Kasmann, Martina Kress, Ines Reinhard, Annette Roth of GIZ
Held at Event: Agriculture Meets Social Protection: How can food and nutrition security benefit?
7 July 2016
This webinar from the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM) was held by Eduardo Nakasone (International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)/Michigan State University) on May 8, 2018. The presentation also includes results of the application of the new method in the value chains of maize and beans (in Guatemala and Honduras), teff (in Ethiopia), wheat (in China), and potatoes (in Ecuador and Peru). We also discussed ongoing work to assess interventions to reduce loss. Full recording and more information available at http://bit.ly/FoodLossWebinar
IFAD Vietnam Country Programme Evaluation March 2011IFAD Vietnam
International Fund For Agricultural Development (IFAD) Vietnam Evaluation, Main Mission, 3 – 24 March 2011 – A Preliminary Review of Findings.
The evaluation team concluded, based on the evidence on the ground, that IFAD’s programme is adding substantial value to the Government of Viet Nam’s efforts to reduce rural poverty.
Presentación de Delgermaa Chuluunbaatar (FAO), en el marco del “Taller Regional de Intercambio de Experiencias de Modelos de Extensión y Servicios rurales para la Agricultura Familiar”, realizado del 10 al 12 de mayo de 2017 en Cartagena, Colombia.
Feed the Future Update April 2010
Laura Birx, Research and Technical Advisor, Nutrition Division, Bureau for Global Health, USAID
CORE Group Spring Meeting, Tuesday April 27, 2010
Présentation par la FAO, Séance thématique sur les approches territoriales et innonvantes de sécurité alimentaire et nutritionnelle, 33e réunion annuelle du Réseau de prévention des crises alimentaires (RPCA), Cotonou, Bénin, 4-6 décembre 2017
Regional study on small scale agriculture in the NENA region Jacques Marzi...Nena Agri
Regional study on small scale agriculture in the NENA region Jacques Marzin CIRAD, Omar Bessaoud CIHEAM-IAMM, Pascal Bonnet CIRAD, International Coordination Team , FAO- Cairo 2015
Catalysing the Sustainable and Inclusive Transformation of Food Systems, From...Francois Stepman
Presentation of Hélène David-Benz - Senior Researcher, French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development on 10 June 2021. Catalysing the Sustainable and Inclusive Transformation of Food Systems, From Assessment to Policy and Investment
Since 2020, the EU, FAO and CIRAD have entered into a partnership with governments and stakeholders to initiate a large-scale assessment and consultation on food systems in more than 50 countries.
This presentation addresses options to make public support for to agriculture climate smart. The presentation was held by Martien van Nieuwkoop, Director of Agriculture Global Practice at the World Bank at the Food Systems Finance Advantage event, part of the Agriculture Advantage 2.0 series at COP24.
Strengthening Rural-Urban Linkages in Africa to achieve food securityFrancois Stepman
Guido Santini, Technical Coordinator of the “Food for the Cities” Programme at FAO
3 December 2018. This was the forth event in the series ‘Frontiers in Development Policy’ and it analyzed the importance of the link between both the rural and urban dimension. In particular the focus was on recognizing the role of small towns and enhancing rural-urban linkages in making food systems more effective and inclusive.
Presentation of Procasur's Knowledge Management tools and strategies during the South-South Knowledge Exchange Workshop in Godollo, Hungary, October, 2015
Our Journey through the promotion of gender equality and women’s empowermentPROCASUR Corporation
By Silvia Sperandini, IFAD´s Gender Team
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
“Share Knowledge, Get Knowledge!” The importance of KM & Networking in the d...PROCASUR Corporation
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Lessons Learned: Sustainable Use of Natural Resources, Mr. Balaram Kandel.PROCASUR Corporation
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Innovation Plan: Bridging the gap to linking networks. BangladeshPROCASUR Corporation
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
learning routes, nepal, procasur, ifad, innovation
Many ways to support street children.pptxSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
What is the point of small housing associations.pptxPaul Smith
Given the small scale of housing associations and their relative high cost per home what is the point of them and how do we justify their continued existance
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
2024: The FAR - Federal Acquisition Regulations, Part 36
13 thierry mahiuex
1. COSOP 2011-2015
IFAD comparative advantage at country level:
• Supporting improved food security
• Improving livelihood of beneficiaries through
participatory approach
• Enhancing leverage by building responsive institutional
partnerships
• Utilizing its capacity to target poor and vulnerable
groups in rural areas
• Maintaining close partnerships with national and local
Government
2. COSOP Goal
To ensure that the rural poor have more choices
for sustainable food security and economic
livelihoods
COSOP 2011-2015
4. SO1 - Community-based improved access to, and management
of, land and natural resources
Outcomes:
Producer interest groups empowered to protect land and
natural resources;
Producer interest groups plan and oversee non-timber forest
products domestication/harvesting
Village-based forest management plans elaborated through
community-based approaches
Improved sub-catchment planning improve sustainable
access to and use of water (HHs and production)
Effective forest restoration and catchment protection
realized
COSOP 2011-2015
5. Outcomes achieved through:
Formation of public access points to disseminate
knowledge community/individual rights
Support to improve tenure security
Support to producer interest groups
NTFP resource assessment
Village water planning, promotion of simple
options for water harvesting
COSOP 2011-2015
6. Development of partnerships to enhance
impact
Provision of technical assistance to partners
Develop synergies with on-going initiatives
COSOP 2011-2015
7. SO2 - Sustainable, adaptive and integrated
farming systems developed
Outcomes:
Increased sustainable production through
effective use of integrated agricultural systems
Improved nutritional balance among poor HHs
Improved resilience and adaptability to
climatic variability, pest and disease outbreaks
COSOP 2011-2015
8. Outcomes achieved through:
Promotion of integrated production systems inclusive
of HH gardens, livestock, aquaculture, cropping,
reliance on NTFPs
Diversified crop portfolios
Simple sloping land conservation practices
Availability of improved genetic material (seeds and
breeds)
Promotion of small-scale irrigation and water
harvesting techniques at community level
Improved post-harvest management of products
COSOP 2011-2015
9. Build capacity and technical know-how and
promote approaches to help transform
traditional farming practices into integrated
farming systems (NAFRI, NAFES, PAFO, DAFO
as well as individual farmers, service delivery
agencies, and private sector)
COSOP 2011-2015
10. SO3 - Linkages to Markets
Outcomes:
Improved incomes and benefit flows from
enhanced access to functioning value chains
Village-based production groups in charge of
production, marketing, conservation, and
advocacy efforts
Develop local value added opportunities
Improved technical, marketing, financial support
for production groups
COSOP 2011-2015
11. Outcomes achieved through:
Farmers’ organizations (focal points for technical
services delivery; advocacy bodies; vehicles to link
production with markets)
Promotion of forward contracts (access to finance,
linkages producers/traders)
Improve distribution of village-based production/value-
added products for local/regional markets
Commercial financing of trade and investment through
farmers’ organizations
Road infrastructure from villages to key trading points
COSOP 2011-2015
12. Cross-cutting issues:
Capacity building of beneficiaries and service
providers
Sensitive and appropriate engagement with
ethnic groups
Fostering engagements with women
Strategic infrastructure related to farming
systems and markets
Formation of farmers and producers common
interest groups
Resilience and adaptation to climate change
COSOP 2011-2015
13. Opportunities for Innovation and Scaling-Up
Land tenure
Agreements on improved access to NFTPs
Integrated farming systems
Improved access to markets through
integrated and enhanced value chains
COSOP 2011-2015
14. Targeting Strategy
Ethnically diverse groups of poor HHs in rural
areas with a focus on:
Highly vulnerable food-insecure HHs (>4
months)
Poor HHs moderately food-insecure but with
great potential to access markets
COSOP 2011-2015
15. Policy Dialogue
Development of farmers’ organizations
Formal recognition of communal tenure
Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on rural
poverty
Enhancing farming communities to further
engage in agricultural extension
COSOP 2011-2015
16. COSOP aligned with 7th National Social and
Economic Development Plan
Projects not always well aligned with COSOP
COSOP indicators not always supported by any
underlying measurement system
Significant differences in Logframe structures
(levels of results) and in indicators
COSOP 2011-2015
17. Corporate indicators
COSOP
indicators
Indicators and targets at project level
FNML SSSJ SNRMP
People moved out of poverty -----
12,000 HH lifted out
of poverty (each HH
with a per capita
income of USD190 per
annum)
Progress in achieving the
MDG No. 1 by 2015 in the
two provinces (reducing
poverty rates by at least
5%)
Household asset ownership index -----
6,000 HH with an
assets index of at least
0.3
20% increase in income
and in the ownership of
household assets
Rural incomes have
increased by 25%
from 2008
Level of child malnutrition,
disaggregated for girls and boys
-----
Child malnutrition at
least 10% better than
the national average
and 35% or lower
20% reduction in child
malnutrition
Incidence of rural
malnutrition has
dropped by 50%
over 2008
Length of hungry season -----
6,000 HH with
improved food
security (measured as
a HFIAS score of 7.0 or
lower)
At least 35% households
with improved food
security
COSOP 2011-2015
18. IFAD's Strategic Objectives and areas of thematic focus COSOP
Investment projects
FNML SSSJ SNRMP
SO1: Increase rural people's productive capacities
1. Access to natural resources X (x) (x) X
2. Access to agricultural technologies and production services X X X X
3. Inclusive financial services (x) X --- ---
4. Nutrition (x) X --- ---
SO2: Increase rural people’s benefits from market participation
1. Diversified rural enterprise and employment opportunities X X X X
2. Rural investment environment (x) (x) --- X
3. Rural producer organizations X X X X
4. Rural infrastructure X X X (x)
SO3: Strengthen the environmental sustainability and climate
resilience of rural people’s economic activities
1. Environmental sustainability X --- --- X
2. Climate change adaptation and mitigation (x) X --- ---
COSOP 2011-2015
19. Implementation Arrangements
Decentralization of Project Management;
Sustainability post-project completion;
Ownership by locals increased;
Need to implement strong capacity building
programs to enhance skills (local authorities,
local service providers, local management
teams)
Key Issues
20. Flow of Funds
Increase responsibility and accountancy at
local level;
Need for shortening the decision process
(planning, approval, disbursement);
Need for simple procedures, checks and
balances, capacity building at local level
Key Issues
21. Activities
Improve synergy between activities (Livelihood
Initiative for Nutrition under SSSJ);
Abandon “one size fits all” approach but respond to
village/beneficiary needs through differentiated
approaches;
Improve cost per beneficiary ratio/cost efficiency of
activities with proper MIS;
Improve access to finance;
Improve local capacity to implement and monitor pro-
poor development projects
Key Issues
22. M&E – MIS
Improve reliability, consistency and
functionality of meaningful MIS and M&E
systems;
Ensure use of performance data for project
steering;
Monitor few relevant key indicators for results
and impact of program’s activities
Key Issues
23. Knowledge Management
Further disseminate successful experiences
and lessons learned throughout the portfolio;
Develop learning events/routes at national
and regional levels;
Ensure further participation in sectoral
working groups (agriculture, rural
development, rural finance)
Key Issues
25. Alignment on MAF Agricultural Development Strategy 2020
Objective: Modernized Agriculture Natural Resources sector
Goal 1: Improvement of livelihood (through agriculture and
livestock activities) has food security as priority
Goal 2: Development of pro-poor and green value chains
through support for partnering investments in commodity
production for local, regional, global markets
Goal 3: Support implementation of climate resilience measures
to stabilize shifting cultivation with social/environmental focus
Goal 4: Develop institutional capacity and human resources to
plan, manage and monitor agriculture natural resources
COSOP 2016-2020
26. Current projects:
SSSJ. (i) Integrated farming systems - (ii) Linkages to
markets. Ending 2017
FNML. (i) Food security and pro-poor market access
- (ii) Inclusive rural finance - (iii) Smallholder
adaptation to climate change. Ending 2019.
GASFP. (i) Food security and nutrition for rural
households. Ending 2021.
Livestock project. (i) Inclusive rural finance - (ii)
Improved livelihoods. Ending 2021.
COSOP 2016-2020