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2016 Global Food Policy Report: Synopsis

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2016
Afrique
Asie
Amérique du Sud
Amériques
Afrique sub-saharienne
Asie méridionale
Afrique
Asie
Amérique du Sud
Amériques

The Global Food Policy Report is IFPRI’s flagship publication. This year’s annual report examines major food policy issues, global and regional developments, and commitments made in 2015, and presents data on key food policy indicators. The report also proposes key policy options for 2016 and beyond to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. In 2015, the global community made major commitments on sustainable development and climate change.

2016 Global Food Policy Report

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2016
Afrique sub-saharienne
Asie méridionale
Afrique
Asie
Amérique du Sud
Amériques

The Global Food Policy Report is IFPRI’s flagship publication. This year’s annual report examines major food policy issues, global and regional developments, and commitments made in 2015, and presents data on key food policy indicators. The report also proposes key policy options for 2016 and beyond to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. In 2015, the global community made major commitments on sustainable development and climate change.

“As a husband I will love, lead, and provide:” Gendered access to land in Ghana

Policy Papers & Briefs
Décembre, 2016
Afrique occidentale
Afrique sub-saharienne
Afrique
Ghana

Improving women’s access to land is high on the agricultural policy agenda of both governmental and non-governmental agencies. Yet, the determinants and rationale of gendered access to land are not well understood. This paper argues that gender relations are more than the outcomes of negotiations within households. It explains the importance of social norms, perceptions, and formal and informal rules shaping access to land for male and female farmers at four levels: (1) the household/family, (2) the community, (3) the state, and (4) the market. The framework is applied to Ghana.

Food policy in 2015-2016: Reshaping the global food system for sustainable development

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2016
Afrique sub-saharienne
Asie méridionale
Afrique
Asie
Amérique du Sud
Amériques

The year 2015 saw a new global commitment to sustainable development that will require a reshaping of the world’s food system. The well-being of people and the planet will depend on creation of a food system that is more efficient, inclusive, climate-smart, sustainable, nutrition- and health-driven, and business-friendly.

Farming Smarter

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2012
Asie méridionale
Afrique
Afrique sub-saharienne
Afrique orientale
Afrique occidentale
Asia du sud-est
Guatemala
Indonésie
Chine
Nigéria
Yémen

Gender and local floodplain management institutions

Policy Papers & Briefs
Décembre, 2006
Asie méridionale
Asie
Bangladesh

Floodplain wetlands are the major common pool natural resource in Bangladesh. Mostly men fish, and both men and women collect aquatic plants and snails. Case studies contrast a women-only, men-only, and mixed community based organization (CBO), each of which manages a seasonal floodplain wetland. The two CBOs in which women hold key positions are in Hindu communities where more women use aquatic resources, work for an income, and belong to other local institutions. In the oldest of these CBOs, more women have gradually become office bearers as their recognition in the community has grown.

Food for education in Bangladesh

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2003
Asie
Asie méridionale
Bangladesh

Pervasive poverty and undernutrition persist in Bangladesh. About half the country’s 130 million people cannot afford an adequate diet. Poverty has kept generations of families from sending their children to school, and without education their children’s future will be a distressing echo of their own. Furthermore, from birth, children from poor families are often deprived of the basic nutritional building blocks that they need to learn easily. Consequently, the pathway out of poverty is restricted for children from poor families.

Control and ownership of assets within rural Ethiopian households

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2003
Afrique
Afrique sub-saharienne
Afrique orientale
Éthiopie

There is renewed interest in the intrahousehold allocation of welfare, particularly among economists studying poor countries where even slight differences in the allocation of household resources can have dramatic consequences on child and female nutrition, morbidity, and mortality (Haddad and Hoddinott 1994; Rose 1999; Dercon and Krishnan 2000). The evidence collected so far tends to demonstrate that the allocation of consumption and leisure among household members varies systematically with their relative contributions to household total income (Thomas 1990; Alderman et al.

Health and nutrition: Overview

Peer-reviewed publication
Décembre, 2003

Gender differences in health and nutrition have long been a subject of study in the intrahousehold allocation literature. Unlike consumption expenditures or farm production, measurements of health and nutritional outcomes are always at the individual level, and thus factors that underlie systematic differences in outcomes—such as age, gender, and position within the household—are more readily apparent.