Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
BookletCorporate general interestDemocratic Republic of the Congo: DIEM-Monitoring emergency agriculture support brief
September 2025
2025Also available in:
This emergency agriculture support brief presents the results of the tenth round of Data in Emergencies Monitoring (DIEM-Monitoring), conducted in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in June and July 2025. It provides humanitarian actors with an in-depth analysis focused on agricultural households to target interventions aimed at supporting livelihoods and strengthening resilience to future shocks, protecting the food security of rural populations. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations established DIEM-Monitoring in June 2020. Data are collected several times a year across food insecure countries by DIEM enumerators through computer-assisted telephone interviews and face-to-face surveys. These data cover shocks, agricultural livelihoods, food security and household needs, and are regularly updated and easily accessible on the DIEM Hub. DIEM products consist of dashboards, maps, briefs and aggregated data, enabling partners and stakeholders to activate mitigation measures and target vulnerable households. -
BookletCorporate general interestYemen: DIEM-Monitoring emergency agriculture support brief
Rounds 28 and 29, September 2025
2025Also available in:
No results found.This emergency agriculture support brief presents the results of the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth rounds of Data in Emergencies Monitoring (DIEM-Monitoring), conducted in Yemen in March and June 2025. It provides humanitarian actors with an in-depth analysis focused on agricultural households to target interventions aimed at supporting livelihoods and strengthening resilience to future shocks, protecting the food security of rural populations. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations established DIEM-Monitoring in June 2020. Data are collected several times a year across food insecure countries by DIEM enumerators through computer-assisted telephone interviews and face-to-face surveys. These data cover shocks, agricultural livelihoods, food security and household needs, and are regularly updated and easily accessible on the DIEM Hub. DIEM products consist of dashboards, maps, briefs and aggregated data, enabling partners and stakeholders to activate mitigation measures and target vulnerable households. -
BookletEmergency responseBangladesh: DIEM-Monitoring emergency agriculture support brief
November 2025
2026Also available in:
No results found.This emergency agriculture support brief presents the results of the latest Data in Emergencies Monitoring (DIEM-Monitoring) round conducted in Bangladesh in August and September 2025. An estimated 793 340 agricultural households (4 029 280 people) are in need of emergency agricultural assistance in Bangladesh. This DIEM-Monitoring brief provides humanitarian actors with an in-depth analysis focused on the agricultural households in need to target interventions aimed at supporting livelihoods and strengthening resilience to future shocks, protecting the food security of rural populations. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) established DIEM-Monitoring in June 2020. Data are collected several times a year across food insecure countries by DIEM enumerators through computer-assisted telephone interviews and face-to-face surveys. These data cover shocks, agricultural livelihoods, food security and household needs, and are regularly updated and easily accessible on the DIEM Hub. DIEM products consist of dashboards, maps, briefs and aggregated data, enabling partners and stakeholders to activate mitigation measures and target vulnerable households.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
-
-
BookletCorporate general interestFAOSTYLE: English 2024The objective of having a house style is to ensure clarity and consistency across all FAO publications. Now available in HTML, this updated edition of FAOSTYLE: English covers matters such as punctuation, units, spelling and references. All FAO staff, consultants and contractors involved in writing, reviewing, editing, translating or proofreading FAO texts and information products in English should use FAOSTYLE, together with the practical guidance on processes and layout questions provided in Publishing at FAO – strategy and guidance.
-