Presented by Dr. Anna Mdee, Mzumbe University/University of Sussex at the workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation Development in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership”, September 2, 2016.
Presented by IFPRI Senior Research Fellow Ruth Meinzen-Dick and University of Dar Es Salaam Professor Faustin Maganga at Workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation
in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership” on September 2, 2016. https://www.ifpri.org/event/new-directions-irrigation-development-tanzania
Presentation by IFPRI's Ruth Meinzen-Dick at the Ninth International Dialogue on Water in Agriculture
“Public-Private Partnerships in irrigation: experiences, benefits and risks," June 1-2, 2016, Bonn, Germany
Presented by Dr. Joachim H.J.R. Makoi, National Irrigation Commission, Ministry of Water and Irrigation/ National Irrigation Commission Representative, at the workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation Development in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership”, September 2, 2016. https://www.ifpri.org/event/new-directions-irrigation-development-tanzania
Presented by Dr. Hans Komakech, Nelson Mandela University-AIST, at the workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation Development in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership”, September 2, 2016.
Presentation at the Dupont Forum. The panel will look at how investing in technologies is insufficient on its own to enact effective agricultural water management, and will explore the importance of accompanying context appropriate policies and institutions.
Presentation at the Dupont Forum. The panel will look at how investing in technologies is insufficient on its own to enact effective agricultural water management, and will explore the importance of accompanying context appropriate policies and institutions.
Presented by IFPRI Senior Research Fellow Ruth Meinzen-Dick and University of Dar Es Salaam Professor Faustin Maganga at Workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation
in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership” on September 2, 2016. https://www.ifpri.org/event/new-directions-irrigation-development-tanzania
Presentation by IFPRI's Ruth Meinzen-Dick at the Ninth International Dialogue on Water in Agriculture
“Public-Private Partnerships in irrigation: experiences, benefits and risks," June 1-2, 2016, Bonn, Germany
Presented by Dr. Joachim H.J.R. Makoi, National Irrigation Commission, Ministry of Water and Irrigation/ National Irrigation Commission Representative, at the workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation Development in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership”, September 2, 2016. https://www.ifpri.org/event/new-directions-irrigation-development-tanzania
Presented by Dr. Hans Komakech, Nelson Mandela University-AIST, at the workshop on “New Directions for Irrigation Development in Tanzania: The Context of Public Private Partnership”, September 2, 2016.
Presentation at the Dupont Forum. The panel will look at how investing in technologies is insufficient on its own to enact effective agricultural water management, and will explore the importance of accompanying context appropriate policies and institutions.
Presentation at the Dupont Forum. The panel will look at how investing in technologies is insufficient on its own to enact effective agricultural water management, and will explore the importance of accompanying context appropriate policies and institutions.
Janet Dwyer's presentation to the Land Economy Department at the University of Cambridge, discussing the implications for the agriculture sector since #Brexit.
TFE Consulting: Energy Demand for Mini-grids in Myanmar 2018Tobias Engelmeier
The are the results of research conducted in 2017 and 2018 in Myanmar on energy use patterns in 50 rural villages. The work was commissioned by Pact Myanmar, Smart Power Myanmar, Rockefeller Foundation, Engie and PIDG;
Presentation was delivered by Tobias Engelmeier of TFE Consulting in Yangon on June 29th, 2018
GCARD2: Briefing paper land, water forests & landscape GCARD Conferences
The adaptation and adoption of conservation agriculture (CA)-based crop management through innovative techniques like reduced soil movement, adequate surface retention of crop residues and economically viable and diversified crop rotations are the way forward to address the emerging challenges mentioned above. This could help in ensuring sustainable food security and offer several environmental benefits in sustainable way. This is relatively a new strategy to deal with food security and environmental degradation in unfavourable agriculture system.
Visit the conference site for more information: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Rewarding water-related ecosystem services in the Canete Basin, PeruInfoAndina CONDESAN
Presentation made in the Multi-stakeholder Dialogue in PSD/PES
12-13 September 2013
FAO, Rome
Marcela Quintero (CIAT), Roger Loyola (MINAM), Yolanda Puemape (MINAM)
In cooperation with the Research and Evaluation Division of BRAC, Copenhagen Consensus Center organized roundtable discussions with an aim to figure out smarter solutions to the most problematic issues facing Bangladesh.
2015 Rising Seas Summit - Mitigating Brownfield RiskMetroCog
With little to no statutory requirement to coordinate outside of local boundaries and a history of municipal-centric governance, the 169 autonomous municipalities within the state of Connecticut face many challenges in planning for environmental risk and for procuring grants and federal funding that favors regionalism.
Over the last five years, MetroCog has been collaborating with it's member municipalities to emphasize and strengthen a regional perspective. This enables better regional planning required for federal transportation and transit funding, as well as a growing interest in environmental conservation. As the members of our Council well know, the environment does not conform to municipal boundaries. This effort has led to an increased number of grant awards benefiting Connecticut.
Water management is a global issue and it is the prime duty of all the people to save and conserve water so that it can be passed on safely to the future generation. Viewers please watch the ppt and leave your likes and comments.
Janet Dwyer's presentation to the Land Economy Department at the University of Cambridge, discussing the implications for the agriculture sector since #Brexit.
TFE Consulting: Energy Demand for Mini-grids in Myanmar 2018Tobias Engelmeier
The are the results of research conducted in 2017 and 2018 in Myanmar on energy use patterns in 50 rural villages. The work was commissioned by Pact Myanmar, Smart Power Myanmar, Rockefeller Foundation, Engie and PIDG;
Presentation was delivered by Tobias Engelmeier of TFE Consulting in Yangon on June 29th, 2018
GCARD2: Briefing paper land, water forests & landscape GCARD Conferences
The adaptation and adoption of conservation agriculture (CA)-based crop management through innovative techniques like reduced soil movement, adequate surface retention of crop residues and economically viable and diversified crop rotations are the way forward to address the emerging challenges mentioned above. This could help in ensuring sustainable food security and offer several environmental benefits in sustainable way. This is relatively a new strategy to deal with food security and environmental degradation in unfavourable agriculture system.
Visit the conference site for more information: http://www.egfar.org/gcard-2012
Rewarding water-related ecosystem services in the Canete Basin, PeruInfoAndina CONDESAN
Presentation made in the Multi-stakeholder Dialogue in PSD/PES
12-13 September 2013
FAO, Rome
Marcela Quintero (CIAT), Roger Loyola (MINAM), Yolanda Puemape (MINAM)
In cooperation with the Research and Evaluation Division of BRAC, Copenhagen Consensus Center organized roundtable discussions with an aim to figure out smarter solutions to the most problematic issues facing Bangladesh.
2015 Rising Seas Summit - Mitigating Brownfield RiskMetroCog
With little to no statutory requirement to coordinate outside of local boundaries and a history of municipal-centric governance, the 169 autonomous municipalities within the state of Connecticut face many challenges in planning for environmental risk and for procuring grants and federal funding that favors regionalism.
Over the last five years, MetroCog has been collaborating with it's member municipalities to emphasize and strengthen a regional perspective. This enables better regional planning required for federal transportation and transit funding, as well as a growing interest in environmental conservation. As the members of our Council well know, the environment does not conform to municipal boundaries. This effort has led to an increased number of grant awards benefiting Connecticut.
Water management is a global issue and it is the prime duty of all the people to save and conserve water so that it can be passed on safely to the future generation. Viewers please watch the ppt and leave your likes and comments.
Rainwater Harvesting Technologies in Makueni County, Kenyainventy
Rainwater harvesting has been in existence for many years and has positively impacted life, agriculture and economy. Despite these known benefits of rainwater harvesting, Makueni County's population is slowly adopting rainwater harvesting technologies. Water scarcity still remains a major constraint to life and economic development in the County. The aim of this paper is to evaluate rainwater harvesting technologies and the factors contributing to adoption of the technologies in the ASAL areas with Makueni County being the case study. The study was conducted in Wanzauni and Itetani locations in Tulimani division, Mbooni West district, Makueni County within Kenya's Eastern Region which lies within the arid and semi arid ecological zones of Kenya. A total of 160 household questionnaires were administered, focus group discussions and key informants interviews done during data collection exercise. The data was analyzed using Statistical package for social scientists (SPSS). Various rainwater harvesting technologies (RWHTs) are used within Makueni County including macro-catchment (earth dams, sand/sub-surface dams), micro-catchment (Zai pits, strip catchment, tillage, contour and semi-circular bunds) and rooftop rainwater harvesting technologies with rooftop catchment being the most commonly used technique. However, adoption of these RWHTs in Makueni County is slow irrespective of their potential to improve livelihoods. A logistic regression analysis was conducted to predict factors affecting adoption of RWHTs within 160 households in Makueni County. Some of the factors found to have statistically-significant positive effect on the adoption of RWHT are gender, literacy levels, social and economic status and technological know-how on RWHT. Ways of promoting the adoption of RWHTs such as capacity building and training, poverty alleviation through enhancement of income generation activities, enhanced formation of community groups aimed at water development activities, and improved designs incorporating mechanized technologies in favour of women and children, are recommended.
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: WATER. It contains: the demand for water, water management, case studies: UK, NIGERIA, INDONESIA, MALAYSIA. Water for agriculture, industrial use, domestic water use, management of water usage in MDEC and LEDC.
By Wais Kabir, Sattar Mandal, Mike Robson (FAO)
Revitalizing the Ganges Coastal Zone Conference
21-23 October 2014, Dhaka, Bangladesh
http://waterandfood.org/ganges-conference/
WATER SHORTAGE ITS CAUSES, IMPACTS AND REMEDIAL MEASURESIN PAKISTANFarhan Hussain
with two thirds of the earths surface covered by water, it is evidently clear that water is one of the most important elements responsible for life on earth. It is not only vital for sustenance of life but equally essential for the socioeconomic development. The global fresh water shortage and food security issues related to teeming billions of population necessitated the shifting of fresh water from agriculture to other more pressing uses. The country is facing the worst ever crises of water shortage for last many years, as water available for any given use has become increasingly scarce.
These set of slides were presented at the BEP Seminar "Targeting in Development Projects: Approaches, challenges, and lessons learned" held last Oct. 2, 2023 in Cairo, Egypt
Caitlin Welsh
POLICY SEMINAR
Food System Repercussions of the Russia-Ukraine War
2023 Borlaug Dialogue Breakout session
Co-organized by IFPRI and CGIAR
OCT 26, 2023 - 1:10 TO 2:10PM EDT
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Food System Repercussions of the Russia-Ukraine War
2023 Borlaug Dialogue Breakout session
Co-organized by IFPRI and CGIAR
OCT 26, 2023 - 1:10 TO 2:10PM EDT
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POLICY SEMINAR
Food System Repercussions of the Russia-Ukraine War
2023 Borlaug Dialogue Breakout session
Co-organized by IFPRI and CGIAR
OCT 26, 2023 - 1:10 TO 2:10PM EDT
Bofana, Jose. 2023. Mapping cropland extent over a complex landscape: An assessment of the best approaches across the Zambezi River basin. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
Mananze, Sosdito. 2023. Examples of remote sensing application in agriculture monitoring. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
Seoul National University (SNU). 2023. Statistics from Space: Next-Generation Agricultural Production Information for Enhanced Monitoring of Food Security in Mozambique. Component 4. Crop analytics for forecasting yields. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). 2023. Statistics from Space: Next-Generation Agricultural Production Information for Enhanced Monitoring of Food Security in Mozambique. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Kickoff Meeting (virtual), January 12, 2023
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). 2023. Statistics from Space: Next-Generation Agricultural Production Information for Enhanced Monitoring of Food Security in Mozambique. Component 1. Stakeholder engagement for impacts. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
Centro de Estudos de Políticas e Programas Agroalimentares (CEPPAG). 2023. Statistics from Space: Next-Generation Agricultural Production Information for Enhanced Monitoring of Food Security in Mozambique. Component 3. Digital collection of groundtruthing data. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
ITC/University of Twente. 2023. Statistics from Space: Next-Generation Agricultural Production Information for Enhanced Monitoring of Food Security in Mozambique. Component 2. Enhanced area sampling frames. PowerPoint presentation given during the Project Inception Workshop, VIP Grand Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique, April 20, 2023
Christina Justice
IFPRI-AMIS SEMINAR SERIES
A Look at Global Rice Markets: Export Restrictions, El Niño, and Price Controls
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
OCT 18, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
Fousseini Traoré
IFPRI-AMIS SEMINAR SERIES
A Look at Global Rice Markets: Export Restrictions, El Niño, and Price Controls
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
OCT 18, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
Abdullah Mamun and Joseph Glauber
IFPRI-AMIS SEMINAR SERIES
A Look at Global Rice Markets: Export Restrictions, El Niño, and Price Controls
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
OCT 18, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
Shirley Mustafa
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A Look at Global Rice Markets: Export Restrictions, El Niño, and Price Controls
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
OCT 18, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
Joseph Glauber
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A Look at Global Rice Markets: Export Restrictions, El Niño, and Price Controls
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
OCT 18, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
Lead authors Jonathan Mockshell and Danielle Resnick presented these slides at the Virtual Book Launch of the Political Economy and Policy Analysis (PEPA) Sourcebook on October 10, 2023.
An output of the Myanmar Strategy Support Program, with USAID and Michigan State University. Presented by Paul Dorosh, Director, Development Strategy and Governance Unit, International Food Policy Research Institute and Nilar Aung, Research Specialist, Michigan State University.
Bedru Balana, Research Fellow, IFPRI, presented these slides at the AAAE2023 Conference, Durban, South Africa, 18-21 September 2023. The authors acknowledged the contributions of CGIAR Initiative on National Policies and Strategies, Google, the International Rescue Committee, IFPRI, and USAID.
Sara McHattie
IFPRI-AMIS SEMINAR SERIES
Facilitating Anticipatory Action with Improved Early Warning Guidance
Co-organized by IFPRI and Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS)
SEP 26, 2023 - 9:00 TO 10:30AM EDT
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2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
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A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
2. PPP – critical questions for water
supply
PPP can take many forms
Public management needs
a more strategic approach.
Whose water needs have
priority?
Irrigation needs cannot
ignore water-energy-food
nexus
3. Assumptions in Irrigation Policy
'Traditional' irrigation is wasteful and inefficient-
suggests training the farmers on better water
use and encouraging the private sector, NGOs
etc. to contribute.
'Improved' traditional irrigation- investment in
upgrading traditional systems (can be seen in
Pare Mountains- see paper by Mul)- suggest
gov. will oversee technical requirements and
encourage PPP
Water conflicts can be avoided if all are
organised properly in 'associations'
4. New schemes
Challenge to establish and bring in private
investment while benefiting small holders
Gov promises 'demand-driven' scheme
identification (sometimes an excuse for doing
nothing!)
Management must formalised......
Zonal Irrigation Units support LGAs (until the
private sector can fill the gap).
But private sector is risk averse- land and water
rights are too risky
Policy is short on specific actions particularly on
managing water supply
5. A political ecology of irrigation
Fieldwork - May 2013-Jan 2014
2 case studies of irrigation:
Dakawa Rice Farm- a 2000 hectare former state
rice farm. Now managed by a co-operative
society for small farmers with large inputs from
USAID – donor supported PPP for small scale
farmers
Uluguru Mountains- hosepipe irrigation for
cultivation of high value fruit and vegetable
crops. Latest evolution for small scale farming
by indigenous WaLuguru people. Private
irrigation without public consent
6. Dakawa- an example of a formal
irrigation scheme
Dakawa- former NAFCO farm- 2000 hectares
of paddy
Built by N. Korea but never operational at full
capacity
Now revived by UWAWAKUDA (a water user's
association and co-operative of small Farmers.
Large investments by USAID- Feed the Future
Improved production (30-40 bags per acre)
through use of system of rice intensification
7. Dakawa
The official story:
Farm is divided into 12 acre blocks.
1 farmer can own a maximum of 1 block (but
many of the 900+ members own 1 or 2 acres
and share blocks as small farmer groups).
The land/water is owned and managed by
UWAWAKUDA on behalf of the members.
Training on the 'system of rice intensification'
(sri) has led to big increases in productivity
See
http://www.feedthefuture.gov/article/feed-future-pre
9. Water for Dakawa
• Water is pumped from the Wami river
• There are an increasing number of upstream
users
• Rivers levels are too low to allow the scheme to
operate outside of the wet season (March-June)
• Water is supplied to blocks by a strict rotation.
Bye-laws control water theft- but there are
disputes within and between blocks
• The Chinese Ag. Research station in Dakawa is
seeking access to river water but has not been
successful.
10. but......
Are these really small farmers?
Who owns the land?
Who controls the organisation?
Is the scheme sustainable?
Competition for water-upstream users- dropping
level of wami river
Poor water use efficiency
High costs of power-15m Tsh per month
Subsidised by donor
Lack of marketing options for small farmers
Illegal rice importation leading to price falls
11. Dakawa and the politics of aid
Dakawa is an aid hotspot
-proximity to Dar-Es-Salaam
-reliable local stars- Veronica Urio story
-China-US aid nexus
-'all of the world is coming to Dakawa….even
the queen of Denmark’
12. ‘Traditional’ and informal
Luguru produce vegetable and fruit crops on
small land holdings.
Past- used traditional furrow systems but these
were banned
Records show concerns over agriculture in the
Ulugurus since German colonisation- promotion
of terracing has been contentious in the past
Now- use hosepipes from the waterfalls and
rivers to feed sprinklers
13. Improved livelihoods
Some good production with market linkages
Vegetables, herbs and fruit in Morogoro
Strawberries- Arusha and Dar (and cannabis)
Evidence of improved livelihoods-
Improvement of housing
Purchase of motorbikes
Construction of road by community
Secondary school for children
15. But
Their activities are seen as illegal- it is informal and
unregulated- characterised as competing with drinking
water supplies in Morogoro and beyond to Dar-Es-
Salaam local hydropolitics
In 2006/7 the Municipal Council tried to evict the farmers
from the mountain- they took the case to the President.
Were told they can stay if they do not farm within 60m of
the water sources and use environmental conservation
practices.
A number of NGOs are supporting this approach- e.g.
Through ‘payment for watershed services’ and organic
farming initiatives
See http://kilimo.org/WordPress/
16. Win-win – a new form of PPP
Work by NGO Sustainable
Agriculture Tanzania:
Organic/agroecological
production enhances
livelihoods and
environmental protection.
It can does not contaminate
water resources and
potentially enhances them-
terracing and increasing soil
organic matter
Opportunity for new form of
PPP- local stakeholders are
already on board
17. Who is managing water supplies?
Ulugurus-water is a freely available resource- shared informally by
those with access to land and capital to buy pipes.
“Government have done nothing so why should they be paid for
water? “ Government says use is illegal and should be
formalised. 2009 Water Resources Act cannot deal with multiple
tiny intakes.
Dakawa- the scarce water to the scheme is only available for a
limited period. Therefore water must be managed fairly through
the formal rules of the scheme and on a strict rotation.
Transgression of rules leads to punishment and/or conflict.
Outside users have caused the shortage of water and need
regulation by the RBO.
Wami-Ruvu River Basin Office- Excellent understanding of the
challenges but no capacity to monitor actual water use. 'We
just sell water’ – anonymous
18. Summing up
• Small-scale irrigation is not a quick fix for agricultural
growth without solving bigger issues of hydropolitics
• Insufficient attention is given to competing uses of
water (e.g. Agricultural use vs power generation)
• Current policy frameworks and approaches are
inadequate, contradictory and ineffective
• Inadequate capacity of RBOs to regulate water use-
‘we just sell water’.
• Climate change, economic growth and increasing
population make water supply a critical issue
• Negotiated solutions must account for water-energy-
food nexus