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Publications
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Value Chain Approaches for Social Change
Over the past decades, there has been an extensive transformation in global agri-food value chains, resulting in advances in efficiency, food quality, and food safety. Despite this transformation, many farmers and labourers active as primary producers in these chains have not experienced improvements in their living standards. Based on a study conducted in 2020 by KIT Royal Tropical Institute and Oxfam Novib, this paper explores value chain approaches that reduce social inequality and enable smallholder farmers and labourers to have decent livelihoods.
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Perspectives of young people and health workers on sexual and reproductive health and its services in Bahir Dar, Amhara region, Ethiopia.
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The potential of land shareholding cooperatives for inclusive agribusiness development in Africa
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Preventing child marriage, teenage pregnancy and female genital mutilation/cutting in Bahir Dar Zuria and Kewet districts, Amhara region
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Being dragged into adulthood? Young people’s agency concerning sex, relationships and marriage in Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia
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From “Etigila Entito Enkalamu” to “Eitia Entito Enkalamu” – How the Yes I Do programme changed lives in Kajiado County in Kenya
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“Teenage mothers can now go back to school” – Teenage pregnancy and child marriage in Traditional Authority Liwonde, Machinga district, Malawi
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Prevention or Punishment? – Teenage pregnancy and child marriage in Chadiza and Petauke, Eastern Zambia
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Progress on Child Marriage, but Unease about Teenage Pregnancy and Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting
Results of the Yes I Do programme (2016–2020) in Rembang, Indonesia
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A gendered aquaculture value chain analysis in northwestern Bangladesh
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“Progress on Child Marriage, but Unease about Teenage Pregnancy and Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting”
Results of the Yes I Do programme (2016–2020) in West Lombok and Sukabumi, Indonesia
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Formative Evaluation of Early Childhood Development interventions on children living with developmental delays and disabilities in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
This formative evaluation, covering the period 2018-2020, seeks to guide UNICEF and its partners on how to scale-up the pilot phase of this program in the short to medium-term (at least up to 2022).
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West African Food System Resilience
The West African region supplies most of the food for its growing population, which now exceeds 400 million. West African countries meet most of the region’s needs for coarse grains, tuber and root crops, vegetables, fruits, and meat (excluding some areas of fast-growing consumption such as chicken).
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Mobile Migrant Population Study Suriname
Assessment of mobile migrant population size, demographics, turnover, movement, and priority health needs in Suriname.
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Mobile Migrant Population Study Suriname – Summary
This document summarizes the findings from the mobile migrant study which was conducted at the request of Suriname’s Malaria Program and looked into the ASM population’s demography, movements, health perceptions, and healthcare seeking behaviours (the full report is linked below).
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Why did informal sector workers stop paying for health insurance in Indonesia? Exploring enrollees’ ability and willingness to pay
Indonesia faces a growing informal sector in the wake of implementing a national social health insurance system—Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN)—that supersedes the vertical programmes historically tied to informal employment.
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Assessment of the social impact of GAA’s ‘Best Aquaculture Practices’ certification
This report reflects the findings and recommendations of a three-year impact assessment gauging the effectiveness of the Best Aquaculture Practices (BAP) third-party certification program’s social and labor requirements.
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Food Systems Decision Support Toolbox
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Herramientas para la toma de decisiones en Sistemas Alimentarios
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Institutional change towards the integration of population and development issues in the All Africa Conference of Churches (AACC)
Churches can no longer ignore the growing challenges caused by unsustainable population growth on the continent. Unless the church starts addressing the issue of population and development urgently and adequately, it will not be able to offer transformative guidance to its followers on the continent. This case study presents the way in which the All Africa Conference of Churches (AACC) has raised this potential by encouraging their members to think about it and develop their own context-specific approaches.