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Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureResilience and behaviour change assessment in the United Republic of Tanzania in the districts of Kaliua, Mlele, Sikonge and Urambo 2025
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No results found.This document presents findings from comprehensive resilience surveys conducted in September 2025 across four districts in western Tanzania (Kaliua, Mlele, Sikonge, and Urambo). Using FAO's SHARP+ methodology, the assessment evaluates smallholder farmers' climate resilience at the household level.The research was implemented as part of the Drylands Sustainable Landscapes Impact Program (DSL-IP), which works toward Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) across eleven countries in Africa and Central Asia.Key components include:- Detailed resilience scores across 21 modules spanning environmental, economic, social, and governance domains- Behavior change assessment identifying barriers and motivators affecting adoption of sustainable practices- Focus on key sustainable interventions, including forest beekeeping, pollinator-friendly crop diversification (black beans, groundnuts), and implementation of sustainable land and forest management practicesThis assessment provides critical insights to guide the development of resilient solutions to common challenges faced in dryland ecosystems. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureResilience and behaviour change assessment in Botswana in the districts of Chobe and Tutume-Mosetse 2025
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No results found.This document presents findings from comprehensive resilience surveys conducted in July 2024 across two districts in Botswana (Chobe and Tutume-Mosetse). Using FAO's SHARP+ methodology, the assessment evaluates smallholder farmers' climate resilience at the household level.The research was implemented as part of the Drylands Sustainable Landscapes Impact Program (DSL-IP), which works toward Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) across eleven countries in Africa and Central Asia.Key components include:- Detailed resilience scores across 21 modules spanning environmental, economic, social, and governance domains- Behavior change assessment identifying barriers and motivators affecting adoption of sustainable practices- Focus on key sustainable interventions, including millet and lablab cultivation, sustainable tourism, horticulture, utilization of Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFPs), and implementation of sustainable land and forest management practicesThis assessment provides critical insights to guide the development of effective resilient solutions to common challenges faced in dryland ecosystems. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureResilience and behaviour change assessment in Zimbabwe in the districts of Chimanimani, Masvingo and Shurugwi 2025
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No results found.This factsheet presents key findings from surveys conducted in Zimbabwe, in the districts of Chimanimani, Masvingo and Shurugwi between November and December 2023, using the Self-evaluation and Holistic Assessment of Climate Resilience of Farmers and Pastoralists (SHARP+) methodology—a tool developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to assess the resilience of smallholder farmers at the household level. Implemented in Zimbabwe as part of the Drylands Sustainable Landscapes Impact Program (DSL-IP), this assessment contributes to achieving Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) across eleven countries in Africa and Central Asia by addressing common challenges through innovative, income-generating solutions.The document provides an overview of resilience scores across 21 key modules, covering environmental, economic, social, and governance domaines. It also explores insights from the behaviour change assessment, identifying barriers and motivators that influence the adoption of targeted sustainable practices within the project landcape —including the millet andsorghum cultivation, as well as the use of Non-Forest Timber Products and more generally the application of sustainable land and forest management practices.
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Book (stand-alone)Technical bookPicturing progress – Four betters in focus 2025This commemorative volume marks the 80th anniversary of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), tracing its journey from a founding conviction – that hunger is not inevitable – to today’s global mission of transforming agrifood systems. Through a rich collection of photographs and narratives, the book illustrates how FAO works alongside farmers, fishers, scientists, governments, Indigenous Peoples, youth and civil society to advance sustainable solutions that nourish both people and planet.Organized around FAO’s vision of the four betters – better production, better nutrition, a better environment and a better life – the book highlights concrete progress: from regenerative farming and climate-smart livestock, to school feeding programmes, land restoration and inclusive digital innovation. It reflects on both the challenges and the opportunities facing agrifood systems, including climate volatility, conflict and inequality, while showing how collaboration, knowledge and innovation create pathways for resilience and hope.Arriving at a moment of reflection and renewal, this volume is both tribute and testimony: to the millions of people whose daily efforts sustain our world, and to FAO’s enduring commitment to building sustainable, inclusive and equitable agrifood systems that leave no one behind.
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