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Searching in Mozambique

Showing 641-650 of 773 results

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  • Document

    Só para o Inglese ver: the policy and practice of tenure reform in Mozambique

    Environment Team, IDS Sussex, 2003
    This paper examines the fundamentals of Mozambican land policy from a livelihoods perspective and identifies considerable potential for improving the sustainability of rural livelihoods and the flexibility and cost effectiveness of policy instruments aimed at increasing security of tenure.The paper examines the impact of the cancellation of private land applications in one province, and argues
  • Document

    Crossing boundaries to reduce malnutrition? An institutional study of agriculture and nutrition in Uganda, Mozambique and Nigeria

    Agriculture-Nutrition Advantage Project, 2003
    This study examines how agriculturalists and nutritionists in Uganda, Mozambique, and Nigeria might work more closely together to reduce malnutrition, hunger, and poverty.The study concludes that the two professional communities are missing important opportunities to collaborate that would have a positive impact on people’s nutritional well being.
  • Document

    Study of faith based organizations responses to orphans and vulnerable children

    Synergy Project, USAID, 2004
    This study reveals how faith based organisations (FBOs) are supporting orphans and vulnerable children.
  • Document

    Re-conceiving war-affected children: from passive victims to active survivors

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2003
    Is it time that education in emergencies occu­pied a more prominent place in humanitarian thinking? How can education help protect the physical and psychological wellbeing of children in war-affected or displaced communities? How can such children act to help protect themselves? What are the risks for kids and for agencies running education programmes in war-affected environments?
  • Document

    Private sector participation in water supply: too fast, too soon?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    Is water privatisation being over-promoted? Is private sector participation (PSP) in its current forms likely to promote the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals to provide the poor with reliable, affordable and sustainable, safe drinking water? How do members of poor communities affected by the process judge PSP? 
  • Document

    The crisis of land distribution in Southern Africa

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    Those who led southern African states to independence promised to redress the inequalities of settler colonialism by returning the land to the people. A generation later the rural poor are still waiting. Many lack access and full rights to agricultural land and, as developments in Zimbabwe and South Africa show, they are getting angry. Where did post-independence land reform policy go wrong?
  • Document

    Asking questions: how healthy are African school children?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004
    More attention needs to be paid to the health of school-age children in sub-Saharan Africa, and their sense of well-being. The use of questionnaires in schools can help teachers and health care workers identify and assess common health problems.
  • Document

    The IMF: wrong diagnosis, wrong medicine

    Oxfam, 1999
    Prepared as part of Oxfam International's Education Now campaign, this briefing paper evaluates the International Monetary Fund (IMF), offering information, statistics, case studies and recommendations for change.
  • Document

    IFAD desk review of the PRSP Process in Eastern and Southern Africa

    European Network on Debt and Development, 2002
    This desk analysis is based on an analysis of the PRSP process in 10 countries (Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia).
  • Document

    Study on private sector development in Mozambique

    Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2002
    Review of the private sector in Mozambique and the priorities for donor intervention. The report reviews that there is a “big project bias” in Mozambique, therefore it is realistic to suggest that the potential for Norwegian investments in Mozambique would be participation by the bigger Norwegian companies in the large-scale projects within the energy and minerals sector.

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