TORS- Development of Climate Smart Agriculture Technical Information Products and Scaling Tools
TORS- Development of Climate Smart Agriculture Technical Information Products and Scaling Tools
TORS- Development of Climate Smart Agriculture Technical Information Products and Scaling Tools
CCARDESA is a key player in Agricultural Research for Development (AR4D) activities and wants to take the AR4D agenda forward by ensuring that Agricultural Transformation embraces digitalization because it has the potential to provide productivity and sustainability gains for the whole agricultural sector. Significant changes in agricultural systems are anticipated because of the convergence of new digital technologies which have the potential to change farming along whole value chains. The demand for region-specific digital technologies for agricultural innovations, coupled with a conducive enabling environment, calls for a systematic assessment of levels of availability of relevant digital systems and the extent to which such technologies are accessible in each of the SADC countries.
Success in fighting poverty in Africa will largely depend on the extent to which rural poverty is reduced as it is largely a rural phenomenon. By examining the rural development strategies of the East African Community, Economic Community of West African States and the Association of South East Asian Nations, the purpose of this study was to determine their relationship to rural poverty reduction. The Rural Development Strategy Soundness Model and Rural Web Model tools were used to examine the soundness and cohesiveness of implementation, respectively. The results showed that rural poverty declined where a rural development strategy had both been sound and cohesively implemented. We concluded that a positive correlation exists between a sound and cohesively implemented rural development strategy and rural poverty reduction. We deduced from this that the former is a missing link in Africa’s fight against rural poverty
Tichaona Muchero & Charles L. Machethe (2021): Sound and cohesively implemented rural development strategies: A missing link in Africa’s fight against Poverty? Development Southern Africa
Success in fighting poverty in Africa will largely depend on the extent to which rural poverty is reduced as it is largely a rural phenomenon. By examining the rural development strategies of the East African Community, Economic Community of West African States and the Association of South East Asian Nations, the purpose of this study was to determine their relationship to rural poverty reduction. The Rural Development Strategy Soundness Model and Rural Web Model tools were used to examine the soundness and cohesiveness of implementation, respectively. The results showed that rural poverty declined where a rural development strategy had both been sound and cohesively implemented. We concluded that a positive correlation exists between a sound and cohesively implemented rural development strategy and rural poverty reduction. We deduced from this that the former is a missing link in Africa’s fight against rural poverty
Tichaona Muchero & Charles L. Machethe (2021): Sound and cohesively implemented rural development strategies: A missing link in Africa’s fight against Poverty? Development Southern Africa
Sustainability planning with the community and local stakeholders is important to ensure that promoted land restoration practices continue being implemented after the Regreening Africa Programme transitions at the end of 2022. Sustainability planning should be part of the programme’s exit planning.
CARE International, CRS,OXFAM, World vision ,
Fuchs, L.E., Bourne, M., Achieng, W., Neely, C. 2021. Sustainability planning with community and local stakeholders: Guidance Note, Regreening Africa. World Agroforestry (ICRAF), Nairobi: Kenya, 26 pp
The Better Life Book will bring hope by giving answers to our food and income needs. The book will help us as a community and as families to: Ÿ increase crop harvests without expensive inputs (like fertilizers and other chemicals), Ÿ protect and benefit from the natural resources such as wildlife, Ÿ build a foundation for community leaders to solve problems, Ÿ secure a better future for our families, and Ÿ leave fertile, productive land for our children's future.
Community Markets for Conservation (2015), COMACO Better life Book 2018, Zambia
Este calendário ilustra os passos a seguir cronológicamente na produção de batata no ano agrícola 2020-2021 no âmbito da implementação do projecto MOSAP II em Angola.
Este folheto foi produzido no âmbito da implementação do projecto MOSAP II em Angola nas províncias do Huambo, Bié e Malanje para consciencializar os Extensionistas, Agricultores e Camponeses beneficiários do projecto e não só.
Climate change is an on-going phenomenon. The climatic patterns have shifted in Lesotho from earlier well-known short summer season charac-terised by erratic rains and some drought spells during the growing sea-son, to unusual floods, low temperatures and limited sunlight. The onset of the planting season is now delayed by either no rainfall or flooding con-ditions that interfere with both sowing of the grain crops and also proper growth and development of those that are already planted. Moreover the heavy rains that unpredictably dominate the summer season associated with cloudy conditions with low temperatures have brought a new chal-lenge of sunlight availability and heat units for optimum photosynthetic ability of the crops.
CCARDESA has a good track record of successfully supporting the implementation of phased, multi-country programs, and will continue to play this role in the context of the MPA. Since Phase 1 of the MPA will include just one country in Southern Africa, Madagascar, one early role of CCARDESA will be to bring visibility to the Program, its merits, and learnings among SADC’s other member countries. In that way, CCARDESA will enable the Program to grow organically and in a way that is responsive to SADC country priorities and needs. CCARDESA has played this role before, one recent example being in the context of APPSA, a program that started out in three countries—Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia—and later moved on to include two more, Lesotho, and Angola.
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