Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
DocumentOther documentHigh-Level Political Forum 2025 - Side Event. Re-imagining the future of women in agrifood systems - Promoting women’s land rights, decent employment and innovative partnerships to advance the SDGs
New York, USA, 14 July 2025
2025Also available in:
No results found.This side event, anchored in the 2025 High-Level Political Forum theme of “advancing sustainable, inclusive, science- and evidence-based solutions for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development Goals for leaving no one behind”, will explore evidence-based approaches and innovative partnerships to advance women’s land rights and decent employment for transformative change in agrifood systems. It is organized by FAO with the Federal Republic of Germany, the United Republic of Tanzania and UN Women. Objectives• Highlight the importance of women's land rights and decent employment in empowering women and advancing SDG 5 and other SDGs, including SDG 8 and 17, emphasizing SDG 5.a indicators;• Showcase evidence-based and innovative solutions that address structural inequalities, advance women’s land rights and improve access to decent jobs;• Showcase initiatives that accelerate financing and partnerships for women's empowerment and gender equality in agrifood systems;• Provide a platform for dialogue and partnership among stakeholders to exchange experiences and identify opportunities for collaboration. -
-
DocumentOther document
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
-
MeetingMeeting documentCL 170/PV - VERBATIM RECORDS - PROCÈS-VERBAUX - ACTAS TAQUIGRÁFICAS 2022
Also available in:
No results found. -
Book (series)Technical studyTea sector review – Georgia 2022
Also available in:
No results found.This study was produced under an FAO-EBRD Cooperation project on reviewing the development potential of the tea sectors of Azerbaijan and Georgia. As a result of the joint research in the two countries carried out as part of the project, a similar separate review of the Azerbaijani tea sector was also published under the FAO Investment Centre's Knowledge for Investment (K4I) programme. Tea has a long tradition of cultivation in Azerbaijan and Georgia, dating back to the nineteenth century. The structural changes that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s led to a dramatic decline of the two countries’ tea sectors. However, interest in tea production in Georgia and Azerbaijan has increased in recent years and, in an effort to revive their once thriving tea sectors, governments have adopted sector development programmes that provide for support to primary tea production. In spite of the long tradition and accumulated know-how of tea production and processing, there is little doubt that investments in both technology and knowledge will be required for the Azerbaijani and Georgian tea sectors to grow in a successful and sustainable way. Production focused on efficiency and quality and mindful of shifts in consumer preferences on global markets, but also of potential environmental risks, will be critical in achieving this goal. This publication is part of the Country Investment Highlights series under the FAO Investment Centre's Knowledge for Investment (K4I) programme. -
Book (stand-alone)Technical studyA learning framework for inclusive, integrated and innovative public policy cycles for family farming 2023Public policies for family farming – when done appropriately – provide a perfect match between different policy areas related to productive, economic, social, environmental and cultural dimensions of sustainable food systems. The Learning framework for inclusive, integrated and innovative public policy cycles for family farming was developed under the framework of the United Nations Decade of Family Farming (2019–2028) to support policymakers, family farmers’ organizations and other relevant stakeholders to increase their understanding of public policy cycles and family farming related policies. This technical and methodological capacity development programme is adaptable to local, national or regional priorities. It offers a holistic perspective to building knowledge and capacity of the various actors involved in the design, implementation and review of effective and coherent policies and programmes. This learning framework responds to the needs of multiple actors, expressed during the UNDFF pre-consultation process, to identify ways to create truly effective and efficient policy frameworks for family farming, and to better engage and participate during policy processes. To provide an appropriate answer to these needs the learning framework was designed through a participatory process building on the experience of governments and family farmers’ organizations, researchers and UN staff, gathering inputs from all relevant actors around the world.