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Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureCox's Bazar, Bangladesh - Progress summary
September 2021 to January 2022
2022Also available in:
No results found.Cox’s Bazar, a vulnerable district in south-eastern Bangladesh, is a priority area for FAO. The district, which has a Bangladeshi population of 2.65 million people, hosts the largest refugee camp in the world with 918 841 Rohingya who reside in 34 makeshift camps. The area is prone to monsoon landslides and seasonal cyclones. FAO supports 146 340 beneficiaries and provides technical expertise to food security and environment sector partners through an integrated approach. In the transition from an emergency to resiliency response, FAO tailors support to the needs, priorities, and context of the affected populations with a focus on strengthening synergies between livelihoods and the environment. Labour scarcity and high production costs limit agricultural productivity in the area. FAO connected farmer groups to market through twenty aggregation centres and links were ere made between aggregation centres and private companies to improve service delivery. FAO distributed vegetable seed, cattle feed, poultry feed and trained farmers in adopting climate resilient farming practices in the host community. Humanitarian and environmental interventions inside the refugee camps include homestead input distribution, promotion of homestead gardening best practices, vulnerable slop stabilizatin, disaster risk reduction etc. FAO is working to restore socioecological systems throughout Cox’s Bazar. Activities include environmental assessments and restoration, biological land stabilization, watershed management, biodiversity protection, human-elephant conflict mitigation, and promotion of renewable energy for sustainable agriculture. Agricultural transformation activities for local communities include support for food production, agricultural mechanization, Farmer Field Schools, business support for farmers, aquaculture and livestock production. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureCox's Bazar, Bangladesh - Progress summary
May to August 2021
2021Also available in:
No results found.Cox’s Bazar, a vulnerable district in south-eastern Bangladesh, is a priority area for FAO. The district, which has a Bangladeshi population of 2.65 million people, hosts the largest refugee camp in the world with 889 704 Rohingya who reside in 34 makeshift camps. The area is prone to monsoon landslides and seasonal cyclones. FAO supports 142 265 beneficiaries and provides technical expertise to food security and environment sector partners through an integrated approach. In the transition from an emergency to resiliency response, FAO tailors support to the needs, priorities, and context of the affected populations with a focus on strengthening synergies between livelihoods and the environment. Heavy monsoon rains from late July caused floods, waterlogging and landslides across the Rohingya refugee camps and local communities. FAO distributed poultry feed, fish feed, and trained farmers in adopting climate resilient farming practices. In the host community, Humanitarian and environmental interventions inside the refugee camps include flood response, soil analysis for the fire-affected camps, reforestation, disaster risk reduction, and promotion of best practices such as six methods of homestead gardening suitable for camp context. FAO is working to restore socioecological systems throughout Cox’s Bazar. Activities include environmental assessments and restoration, biological land stabilization, watershed management, biodiversity protection, elephant conservation, and promotion of renewable energy for sustainable agriculture. Agricultural transformation activities for local communities include support for food production, agricultural mechanization, Farmer Field Schools, business support for farmers, aquaculture, livestock production, and animal health management. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetBrochureProgress summary – Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
January to April 2021
2021Also available in:
No results found.Cox’s Bazar, a vulnerable district in south-eastern Bangladesh, is a priority area for FAO. The region, which has a Bangladeshi population of 2.65 million people, hosts the largest refugee camp in the world with 884 000 Rohingya who reside in 34 makeshift camps. The area is prone to monsoon landslides and seasonal cyclones. FAO supports 141 400 beneficiaries and provides technical expertise to food security and environment sector partners through an integrated approach. In the transition from an emergency to resiliency response, FAO tailors support to the needs, priorities, and context of the affected populations with a focus on strengthening the connection between livelihoods and the environment. 48 300 people were affected directly by the recent fire. 75 hectares of land inside the camp was impacted. FAO conducted an environmental assessment, developed an environment and disaster risk mitigation advocacy note, and developed land restoration guidelines. As part of the FAO-WFP strategic partnership, 30 000 Rohingya households across 34 camps will be supported to improve their nutritional status, with 2 000 farmers connected to markets through aggregation centres. A new four-year project commenced under the EU-FAO Global Network Against Food Crises Alliance: PROACT: Resilience Strengthening through Agri-Food Systems Transformation in Cox’s Bazar. As part of FAO's Rohingya response, six vegetable cultivation systems were identified through a rapid assessment of homestead vegetable gardening. 259 hectares of degraded forestland restored and maintained.
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Book (stand-alone)Technical bookMonitoring, evaluation and learning in farmer field school programmes
A framework and toolkit
2023This document focuses on the implementation phase of farmer field school (FFS) programmes and provides guidance and tools that will help farmer field schools to bring about the change expected by the programme and the communities it supports, by setting up a robust monitoring, evaluation and learning (MEL) system. It also introduces impact assessment as an integral management function linked to monitoring, evaluation and learning in FFS programmes.It is aimed at project and programme designers, managers and staff involved in planning, monitoring, evaluation and learning of project/programmes with a farmer field school component. It also targets those who will be involved in the initial design, planning, follow-up of monitoring, evaluation and learning and impact assessment to improve programme implementation. The document outlines background information and tools to help ensure that implementation of FFS programmes will lead to the anticipated outputs, outcomes and impacts, by setting up a robust MEL system and impact assessment methodology/framework for the improvement of ongoing FFS projects and programmes and the design of new ones. -
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BookletEmergency responseSyrian Arab Republic: Emergency and Resilience Plan 2026–2028 2025
Also available in:
No results found.After 14 years of conflict and recurrent climate shocks, the agriculture sector has been among the hardest hit in the Syrian Arab Republic, with severe damage to productive assets and widespread disruption to food production. As a result, food insecurity remains extremely high: 14.6 million people are food insecure, including 9.1 million acutely food insecure and 1.4 million severely food insecure. Through its Emergency and Resilience Plan (ERP) 2026–2028, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) sets out its approach to restoring essential production, safeguarding core assets and supporting climate-resilient livelihoods. Anchored in the humanitarian–development–peace nexus, the ERP combines time-critical wheat, livestock and irrigation support with measures that strengthen data systems, local institutions and community-based resource management. With a funding requirement of USD 286.7 million, the ERP aims to reach 9.8 million people through coordinated, evidence-based interventions that reduce aid dependence and contribute to a more inclusive and resilient agrifood system.