3-5 June 2019
Nutrition-sensitive agriculture offers great potential for Sustainable Development Goal 2 as it connects agricultural development to improved nutrition outcomes. Examples of nutrition-sensitive agriculture interventions are bio-fortification, home vegetable gardens, and small animal rearing (Ruel et al. 2018).
Since many nutrition-sensitive agriculture interventions have been applied in recent years, this E-Conference aims to:
- Take stock of what we have learned so far about nutrition-sensitive agriculture, i.e. what works and what does not work, and under what conditions?
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Share and discuss this knowledge with practitioners in the field (e.g. farmers, extension workers, NGOs and policy makers)
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Turn the evidence base into concrete recommendations for practitioners to implement effective nutrition-sensitive interventions in agricultural development
Register to join this free online conference. Subscribing allows you to participate in the daily live sessions with our experts and access the online community to discuss insights, exchange project results, ask questions and discuss challenges with colleagues from around the world.
Programme
Monday 3 June, 13:00 GMT: Smallholder production and Dietary Diversity
Matin Qaim of the University of Göttingen will discuss the linkages between smallholder on-farm production diversity and impacts on dietary diversity, as well as the impacts of specialization of cash crops on consumption benefits.
Tuesday 4 June, 13:00 GMT: Market Challenges and Solutions to Nutritious Food Access
Harold Alderman of IFPRI will discuss the linkages between markets, diets and nutrition with a particular focus on affordability and access of nutritious foods in low- and middle-income contexts, the challenges and potential market-based solutions.
Wednesday 5 June, 13:00 GMT: Women’s Empowerment for Better Nutrition
Agnes Quisumbing of IFPRI will discuss women’s empowerment as well as ownership and control of assets, and its impacts on child and women’s nutritional status and overall household food security.
29 May, 2019 - 12:15 PM TO 01:45 PM EDT
Interventions and innovation can lower the price of individual foods, but healthy eating depends on access to a mix of foods from diverse sources. How has the overall cost of meeting dietary needs changed over time worldwide, and in Africa and South Asia specifically? What determines the cost of a healthy diet? And how does affordability affect dietary intake and health status in different locales?
To answer these questions, Changing Access to Nutritious Diets in Africa and South Asia (CANDASA) has been using new food price indexes that account for food substitutions to meet nutritional needs to evaluate food systems all over the world, including in Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Malawi, and Tanzania.
This seminar will present the outcomes of CANDASA’s work to date, with a panel discussion featuring field researchers from each country to discuss the local and global implications of their results.
Research by Tufts and IFPRI on this topic is supported by UKAid and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Speakers
- Anna Herforth, Independent Consultant
- William A. Masters, Professor, Tufts University
Discussant
- Derek Headey, Senior Research Fellow, IFPRI
Panelists
- Fantu Nisrane Bachewe, Research Coordinator, IFPRI
- Yan Bai, PhD Candidate, Tufts University
- Stevier Kaiyatsa, Economist, Ministry of Finance, Planning & Development, Malawi
- Fulgence Mishili, Senior Lecturer, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania
- Kalyani Raghunathan, Research Fellow, IFPRI
- Daniel Sarpong, Associate Professor and Dean, School of Agriculture, University of Ghana
- Kate Schneider, PhD Candidate, Tufts University
Light lunch will be available starting at 11:45am. Event begins promptly at 12:15pm.
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
9:00am New York
2:00pm London
3:00pm CEST
4:00pm Ethiopia
What is a healthy diet? This Ag2Nut webinar presents how 90 countries have answered that question, sharing results from a newly-published Global Review of Food-Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDG). The number of countries with FBDG is slowly increasing, and the newest will be Ethiopia, which is currently in the process of developing FBDG for the first time. This discussion will give an inside view into how countries define healthy diets that are appropriate for nutrition, culture, and the specific food system of a place.
The webinar will be recorded.
Register here
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