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Tackling climate change and aid in Africa
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006Climate change is already affecting many developing countries. In Africa, over 70 percent of workers rely on small-scale farming dependent on direct rainfall. Even small changes to weather patterns can threaten food security and health. These impacts present a huge challenge to the coordination of aid efforts and the design of development policies.DocumentLiberalised cotton markets in Africa: what could bring success?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006Cotton is an important crop for many sub-Saharan African countries. In west Africa the cotton sectors were, until recently, managed as state monopolies, while in southern and eastern Africa they were liberalised around a decade ago. Finding a balance between competition and coordination is central to the success of cotton liberalisation.DocumentPilot community surveillance project
The Change Project, 2004This report summarises the evaluation of Project HOPE in Mozambique. The pilot project was aimed at introducing a programme for identifying the outbreak of certain diseases at the community level.DocumentGender, Religious Involvement, and HIV/AIDS Prevention in Mozambique
2005How does religion affect how women and men perceive HIV/AIDS? The potential of a faith-based response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere has been widely lauded by religious institutions, sympathetic governments, and non-governmental organisations (NGOs).DocumentEvaluation of general budget support: synthesis report
DAC Network on Development Evaluation, 2006OECD donor countries now channel about US$ 5 billion (some 5 per cent of their aid) directly to the budgets of developing country governments.This report reflects findings from an evaluation conducted by the OECD DAC to assess to what extent, and under what circumstances, General Budget Support (GBS) is relevant, efficient and effective for achieving sustainable impacts on poverty reduction and gDocumentSouth African gender elections and media training report
Gender Links, Johannesburg, 2005These country reports produced by Gender Links (GL) give a detailed overview of training workshops held in South Africa, Malawi, Botswana, Namibia, Mozambique, Angola and Mauritius, ahead of their elections in 2004 and 2005.DocumentThe economic impact of telecommunications on rural livelihoods and poverty reduction: a study of rural communities in India (Gujarat), Mozambique and Tanzania
Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation, 2005Aimed at a policy audience this paper looks at the use of various communications technologies in villages in Gujarat, Mozambique and Tanzania.DocumentService delivery for sustainable peace
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006The provision of services such as water, health and education has a direct impact on countries emerging from conflict. Sustainable peace depends not only on agreement between political forces, but also on whether those most affected by conflict can improve their social and economic situation.DocumentSeed aid for seed security: advice for practitioners
Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical, Colombia, 2006Does seed aid needs to be improved? According to the authors of this publication series, seed-based agricultural recovery is more complex than commonly assumed. This series of practice briefs offers advice on how to sustain and strengthen seed systems during disaster response and recovery periods.DocumentAnalysing the problem of unsustainable health information systems in less developed economies: case studies from Tanzania and Mozambique
Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway, 2005This working paper, published by the Department for Informatics at the University of Oslo, examines donor-supported health information systems (HIS) implemented in Tanzania and Mozambique, in order to analyse the factors affecting sustainability of such systems and to suggest ways of making them more sustainable.Pages
