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Can the urban poor afford modern energy? The case of Ethiopia
Elsevier, 2002This article compares the costs of using modern fuels and purchasing power of people living in poverty in urban Ethiopia. The three forms of energy considered are: kerosene, butane gas and electricity. The study examines the affordability of these fuels for poor households and estimated initial costs.DocumentSituational analysis of indigenous social institutions and their role in rural livelihoods: the case of selected food insecure lowland areas of Southern Ethiopia
2013Close examination and analysis of these social institutions is very important not only from the household economic point of view but also because of its significant role in other livelihood aspects. The data for this study was collected from 453 household heads that were selected through a random sampling technique.DocumentWhy women farmers are left out of the programs. Lessons learned. Evaluation of Norway's bilateral agricultural support to food security
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2013Norway’s Bilateral Agricultural Support to Food Security 2005-2011 was reviewed in 2012-2013. This Lessons Learned document was prepared as a continuation of that review. Its purpose is to identify lessons learned regarding women’s rights and gender1 issues in the projects/programmes2 reviewed, in order to achieve more gender equality in Norwegian-funded agricultural programmes.DocumentVariation in malaria transmission in Southern Ethiopia: the impact of prvention strategies and a need for targeted intervention
Centre for International Health, University of Bergen, 2013In Ethiopia, 60 per cent of the population is at risk of malaria. The transmission of the disease is unstable and the possibility of epidemics demand continuous vigilance and preparedness of the health system. The complexity of the transmission of the disease has become an impediment to retain the effectiveness of prevention and control strategies.DocumentCAADP Ethiopia: A New Start?
Future Agricultures Consortium, 2013Future Agricultures Working Paper 60DocumentGraduation of Households from Social Protection Programmes in Ethiopia
Future Agricultures Consortium, 2013Full title: Graduation of Households from Social Protection Programmes in Ethiopia: Implications of Market Conditions and Value Chains on Graduation Future Agricultures Working Paper 63Feyera SimaJune 2013DocumentWarming to Change? Climate Policy and Agricultural Development in Ethiopia
Future Agricultures Consortium, 2013Future Agricultures Working Paper 71Leulseged Yirgu, Alan Nicol and Shweta SrinivasanAugust 2013DocumentCan China and Brazil help Africa feed itself?
Future Agricultures Consortium, 2013The questions of how Africa can feed itself, and how the agricultural sector can be a more effective engine for growth and development, have long been targets of national governments. Western donors have increased assistance following the 2007/8 food price crisis.DocumentScaling up nutrition: Progress report from countries and their partners in the movement to Scale Up Nutrition (SUN)
United Nations [UN] Standing Committee on Nutrition, 2011This draft report was prepared for the High Level Meeting on Nutrition at the UN General Assembly in September 2011 and the follow-up workshop for the Scale-Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement, which was designed to help nations where people are at risk of under-nutrition and aims to show results within 1,000 days.DocumentA synthesis of lessons: government experiences of scale-up of community-based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM)
Emergency Nutrition Network, 2012This paper provides a synthesis from lessons of government experiences with scaling up Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) in India, specifically looking at 9 country case studies (Ethiopia, Pakistan, Niger, Somalia, Kenya, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Malawi, and Mozambique).Pages
