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Searching with a thematic focus on Food security in Bangladesh

Showing 71-76 of 76 results

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  • Document

    Urban poverty in Bangladesh: the perspective of the Nutritional Surveillance Project

    Development Experience Clearinghouse, USAID, 2002
    How can the rising numbers of people living in extreme poverty in the slums of towns and cities in Bangladesh they be raised from poverty?
  • Document

    Urban challenges to food and nutrition security

    International Food Policy Research Institute, 2004
    This research centre holds information from IFPRI's research program Urban Challenges to Food and Nutrition Security.
  • Document

    Hands not land: how livelihoods are changing in rural Bangladesh

    Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, 2002
    This book provides some ideas for development practitioners on how to approach the challenge of the eradication of poverty in Bangladesh. Its origins lie in a study of rural livelihoods commissioned in 2000-2001 by DFID UKThis book is an overview of research papers that examine the life and livelihoods of people living in rural Bangladesh.
  • Document

    Targeted development programmes for the extreme poor: experiences from BRAC experiments

    Chronic Poverty Research Centre, UK, 2002
    This paper, published by the Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC), analyses Income Generation for Vulnerable Group Development (IGVGD), a programme initiated by the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) which aimed to link food aid with training, savings and credit.
  • Document

    The 1998 floods in Bangladesh: disaster impacts, household coping strategies, and response

    International Food Policy Research Institute, 2002
    This report, based on data from a survey of 757 rural households in seven flood-affected regions (thanas ) and on analysis of secondary data on food grain markets, describes how government policy, well-functioning private markets, household coping strategies,and donor and NGO interventions combined to maintain availability and access to food.Concludes that, in spite of severe disruption to food
  • Document

    Microdeterminants of Consumption, Poverty, Growth, and Inequality in Bangladesh

    Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1999
    What are the gains from a better education, more land ownership, or a different occupation in Bangladesh? Do the gains differ in urban and rural areas? Have they remained stable over time? Do household size, family structure, and gender affect well-being?

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