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Searching in Malawi, South Africa

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  • Document

    Leveraging services trade liberalisation for enhanced food security in SADC

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2012
    The global food crisis of 2008 threw into sharp relief the problem of food security in many developing countries. In the case of Southern African Development Community (SADC), the food crisis served to highlight the decline in agricultural productivity over the years and the descent of some countries from net food exporters to net food importers.
  • Document

    The Southern African sugar sector

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    The sugar industry has the potential to play a key developmental role in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region. The current paper illustrates that the sugar industry in Southern Africa is extensive, making up slightly more than half of the continent’s sugar production.
  • Document

    Building a regional electricity market: SAPP challenges

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    Enlarging national electricity markets beyond borders could help to decrease variable supply and demand issues and stimulate capacity investment. In this sense, the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP) is the regional association of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) member states’ national utilities energy providers.
  • Document

    Political economy of regional integration in Southern Africa series: the private sector as a driver of regional integration

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    The Southern African Development Coordination Conference (SADCC) was considered successful in achieving integration in areas such as water, health and power. However, once South Africa joined the regional grouping and it became known as SADC, the focus shifted towards trade, paying less attention to other areas of integration.
  • Document

    The impact of transfrontier conservation areas on regional integration

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    Transfrontier conservation areas (TFCAs) have been established in various locations within Southern Africa, showing that a regional public good can be protected, developed and shared between various member states by the active participation of a multitude of actors.
  • Document

    Home-Based Care Alliance policy brief: debunking myths

    Home-Based Care Alliance, 2013
    The Home-Based Care Alliance (HBCA) represents more than 30,000 caregivers organised into multi-district HBCAs in twelve African countries, caring for over 200,000 neighbours and friends, and with a history of organising around HIV/AIDS and its effects.
  • Organisation

    Home-Based Care Alliance (HBCA)

  • Document

    Social protection for food security: A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition

    2012
    Social protection has risen rapidly up the development policy agenda in the last decade. There is also a clear trend to making social protection, as well as food security, ‘rights-based’ rather than ‘discretionary’. Yet no clear consensus has so far emerged concerning many basic design choices and implementation of social protection policies and programs.
  • Document

    Regional agricultural policy: priority policy issues and interventions

    Southern African Development Community, 2012
    Guided by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Treaty of 1992, several SADC Protocols have been developed to guide, support and promote appropriate actions at regional and national levels towards the attainment of the SADC Common Agenda which promotes sustainable and equitable economic growth and socio-economic development in order to ensure poverty alleviation with the ultimate objec
  • Document

    Radioactive Revenues: Financial Flows between Uranium Mining Companies and African Governments

    Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations, 2011
    For African countries, the revenue derived from the uranium mining operations of multinational corporations is despite the high price of uranium minimal, uncertain and volatile. The financial agreements that these countries make with the uranium producers regarding their share in the profits are the primary reason for this state of affairs.

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