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Book (stand-alone)The Restoration Initiative: 2021 Year in Review 2022
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2021 marks the completion of The Restoration Initiative’s (TRI) third full year of implementation. Despite challenges lingering from the COVID-19 global pandemic, 2021 was a year of encouraging progress. As stay-at-home work requirements and other restrictions were lifted, project participants were able to return to the field, using the analyses, policy recommendations and landscape restoration and management plans developed in 2020 to accelerate restoration actions. In addition, TRI’s global support partners launched an initiative that will help close the investment gap for young enterprises that incorporate nature-based solutions (NbS), and will continue to advance forest landscape restoration (FLR) knowledge- sharing and capacity-building initiatives for TRI partners and the wider restoration community. In many ways, 2021 was a year of transitions, but it also presented a fresh start for continuing on-the-ground work with renewed vigour as the world collectively transitioned to the new normal. -
Book (stand-alone)The Restoration Initiative: 2023 Year in Review 2024
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No results found.Every year since 2019, The Restoration Initiative (TRI) Year in Review showcases the amazing achievements that all of the ten TRI country teams have reached in promoting and implementing forest and landscape restoration (FLR). This annual publication also shows achievements at the programme level, such as enhanced partnerships, dedicated support across countries to ensure high-quality FLR outcomes, and a platform to share and exchange knowledge with the global restoration community. As 2024 marks the last year of the global support project, it is an opportunity to reflect on the progress that has led to today’s achievements. This provides a guiding light for all the TRI country teams that continue implementation until 2026. -
DocumentMonitoring food security in countries with conflict situations: A joint FAO/WFP update for the United Nations Security Council (July 2016)
Food Security Updates: July 2016
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No results found.This document is a collection of briefs on countries in which food security has been affected by conflict and other crises. Here is an overview of some key numbers: people in conflict affected states are up to three times more likely to be undernourished than those who are living in more stable developing countries. The most recent projections suggest that approximately half of the global poor now live in states characterized by conflict and violence. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) have a strong interest, and a potentially important role to play, in supporting transitions towards peace.
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