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Integrating older people: a training of trainers manual for successful mainstreaming of age-friendliness in the Canadian Red Cross' programme in Aceh, Indonesia
HelpAge International Asia, Pacific Regional Development Centre, 2009This training of trainers manual was developed for use in by the Canadian Red Cross, but is suitable for other organisations to adapt for their own purposes. The manual consist of six units that can be treated as sessions which can make up a three day intense workshop, or can be individually selected to provide topic specific training.DocumentGoverning rubber market chains in Indonesia
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2009Rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) has generated substantial profits to communities living near forests in many countries. In Indonesia, rubber producers have taken advantage of international demand, national development schemes, and high competition among wholesalers working for processing plants.DocumentAnalysis of livelihood cash grant programme implemented for older people after Tsunami
HelpAge International, 2008This report provides an account of a livelihood cash grant programme implemented in Banda Aceh in the aftermath of the 2004 Tsunami. It shows that older people are still willing and able to work and should therefore be included in livelihood projects. Part I of the report describes the cash grant programme, its implementation and lessons learnt. It points out:DocumentAgricultural trade reform and poverty in the Asia-Pacific: a survey and some new results
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, 2008This working paper analyses the relationship between agricultural trade policy reform and poverty in the Asia-Pacific region. The paper assesses the potential economic implications of agricultural trade reform under the Doha Development Agenda, with a special focus on that region.DocumentTechnology-based vocational skills training for marginalized girls and young women
UNESCO Bangkok, 2008In most impoverished communities, there has long been a heavy reliance on self-help mechanisms and micro-enterprise development (especially among women) in the informal economy for household and community survival and local income-generation.DocumentMultidimensional poverty in Indonesia: trends, interventions and lesson learned
Global Institute for Asian Regional Integration, Waseda University, 2008This paper describes the current state of multidimensional poverty in Indonesia and reviews the characteristics of major programs designed to address multidimensional poverty, their implementation problems and impacts. It also details the lessons from the Indonesian experience which can be applied to future targeted social protection programs to address human security in IndonesiaDocumentAccess to housing for renters and squatters in Tsunami-affected Aceh, Indonesia
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore (NUS), 2007This policy paper considers access to housing for renters and squatters in tsunami-affected Indonesia.DocumentHousing for the landless: resettlement in Tsunami-affected Aceh, Indonesia
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore (NUS), 2008Women often face pre-displacement constraints on rights to land, and are at greater risk of losing access to land after disasters. Yet, the aftermath of a disaster is the time when women most need land for recovery. This paper is structured to reflect these concerns about women and land rights in disaster-affected Indonesia.DocumentCommunity self-mobilisation to end open defecation
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2008With the Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) approach, communities analyse their sanitation conditions, understand the impact of open defecation on health and the environment, and take collective action to end open defecation (OD).DocumentSustainability issues in the tea sector - a comparative analysis of six leading producing countries
Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations, 2008This report presents a detailed and comparative analysis on social, economic and ecological conditions in the tea sector in six of the most important tea-producing countries: India, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Indonesia, Kenya and Malawi. It also presents an overview of trade, production and stakeholders in international tea supply chains. The main findings include:Pages
