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Book (stand-alone)Technical studyAccès aux ressources génétiques pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture et partage des avantages en découlant: typologie des mesures nationales
Supplément I
2024La Commission des ressources génétiques pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture (la Commission), à sa 17e session ordinaire, a demandé que soit élaborée une enquête sur les approches législatives, administratives et stratégiques existantes, y compris les pratiques optimales, en matière d’accès et de partage des avantages dans les différents sous-secteurs de ressources génétiques pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture (RGAA) et sur les connaissances traditionnelles associées aux RGAA (CTRGAA) que détiennent les peuples autochtones et les populations locales, en vue de déterminer les approches couramment adoptées et les enseignements à tirer de leur mise en œuvre, ainsi que de repérer les difficultés et de trouver des solutions. En réponse à la demande de la Commission, une enquête a été commandée en vue de déterminer quels types de mesures législatives, administratives ou stratégiques les pays ont pris pour tenir compte des particularités des RGAA et des sous-secteurs de RGAA ainsi que des CTRGAA dans les mesures en matière d’accès et de partage des avantages. À sa 18e session ordinaire, lors de l’examen de l’enquête, la Commission a demandé que soit élaborée une étude rassemblant des exemples particuliers de dispositions légales ou administratives ou de politiques en vigueur qui tiennent compte, directement ou indirectement, des particularités des RGAA et des connaissances traditionnelles s’y rapportant. La présente publication constitue le Supplément I de la typologie des mesures nationales en matière d’accès et de partage des avantages montrant l’importance des RGAA, le rôle spécifique qu’elles jouent dans la sécurité alimentaire et leurs caractéristiques propres. -
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MeetingMeeting document
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MeetingMeeting documentCOPPESAALC-XVIII-3 Summary of agreements adopted during the 35th FAO Committee on Fisheries
XVIII Session of the Commission of Small-Scale, Artisanal Fisheries and Aquaculture of Latin America and the Caribbean. San Jose, Costa Rica, 29-31 March 2023
2023Also available in:
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DocumentTechnical bookFarming snails 1: learning about snails, building a pen, food and shelter plants
Better Farming Series, no. 33 (1986)
1986Also available in:
No results found.This illustrated manual teaches a farmer the basics of snail farming: how to identify edible snails, how to locate snails, where to farm them, plants for food and plants to shelter snails, and how to manage environmental factors such as land that is wet, dew, rain and wind. -
Book (series)Technical reportThe Food and Nutrition Security Resilience Programme in South Sudan
Baseline report
2021Also available in:
No results found.This report acts as a baseline for the Food and Nutrition Security Resilience Programme (FNS-REPRO) of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), a four-year programme of USD 28 million funded by the Government of the Netherlands. This programme contributes directly to the operationalization of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 2417 by addressing the “cause-effect” relationship between conflict and food insecurity in Somaliland, the Sudan (Darfur) and South Sudan. The programme, which became operational in October 2019, is designed to foster peace and food security at scale through a multi-year livelihood- and resilience-based approach. The FNS-REPRO component in South Sudan focuses on developing the seed sector value chain: first and foremost with the objective to close the cereal production gap, while eventually providing more diversified products for local, national and export markets. The purpose of the study is to collect baseline values for identified project indicators, which will be tracked over time and used to establish the impact of the project. In addition, it identifies and documents lessons learned that will facilitate the continuous realignment of the current project’s theory of change and assist in defining and designing similar future food security projects in South Sudan as well as in other parts of the world with similar contexts. The baseline study was structured around the project indicators that can be measured at household level as well as indicators that will be used to estimate household resilience capacity. Estimation of the household resilience capacity is done using the FAO RIMA-II tool. Overall, the study employed a panel design with both intervention and comparison households. The current baseline survey focused on Yambio and Torit counties, the first areas of the project roll-out. The data collection covered about 600 households from the two counties (407 treatment and 192 control) in October 2020.