Food Rights for Real
Published by: IDS and Oxfam
Does more talk of the right to food and more action on food security amount to more accountability and effectiveness in tackling hunger?
Showing 61–70 of 107 results
Published by: IDS and Oxfam
Does more talk of the right to food and more action on food security amount to more accountability and effectiveness in tackling hunger?
Published by: IDS
Who wants to farm? In an era of land grabs and environmental uncertainty, improving smallholder productivity has become a higher priority on the poverty and food security agenda in development, focusing attention on the next generation of farmers.
Published by: IDS and Oxfam
The first year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life find important changes in people's wellbeing and development.
Published by: IDS and Oxfam
This document is the highlights report for the first year results of a four-year study on how food price volatility affects everyday life find important changes in people's wellbeing and development.
Published by: IDS
This paper reports on an effort to derive lessons about how security and insecurity shape processes of women’s empowerment in developing countries through a thematic synthesis of a collection of research outputs
Published by: The World Bank
What did the global food, fuel, and financial crises of 2008-11 mean to people living in the developing world? How did people cope with the crisis and how effective were they at averting major impacts? These are the questions addressed by this book, which emerged out of qualitative crisis monitoring initiatives carried out by IDS and the World Bank.
Published by: Routledge
This paper asks: why is politics so prone to rule-breaking in Bangladesh, and what does it matter?
Published by: IDS
The major global crises of the past four years have collectively had a dramatic impact on people's lives and livelihoods – but have they also had a large impact on core ideas underlying mainstream development?
Published by: IDS
This paper explores how these perceptions and narratives around women’s empowerment have evolved in Bangladesh from 2000 to date.