IFPRI Podcast show

IFPRI Podcast

Summary: The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries. Established in 1975, IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 50 countries. It is a research center of CGIAR, a worldwide partnership engaged in agricultural research for development.

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  • Artist: International Food Policy Research Institute
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Podcasts:

 IFPRI Special Event: Pro-WEAI - 10/25/2018 - MRuel | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:06:52

Presenters: Marie Ruel, Director of Poverty, Health and Nutrition, IFPRI The pro-WEAI is a new survey-based index that builds on the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) and is adapted for project use with a closer focus on aspects of empowerment related to health and nutrition. The index is being developed by IFPRI’s Gender, Agriculture, and Assets Project, Phase 2 (GAAP2), a learning and capacity-building initiative working with 13 agricultural development projects, which is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Feed the Future (led by USAID), and the CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (A4NH). The GAAP2 team will introduce the latest version of the pro-WEAI as a measure of women’s empowerment and orient potential users to the WEAI Resource Center. Panelists representing organizations that are potential users of pro-WEAI will discuss how the tool can support knowledge management in their projects. The discussion will also solicit feedback from the broader development community, including donors, NGOs, and the private sector, about pro-WEAI’s usefulness in promoting women’s empowerment in agricultural projects and as part of national statistical surveys, and further discuss what policy implications can be derived from these analyses.

 IFPRI Special Event: Pro-WEAI - 10/25/2018 - FPlace | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:04:11

Presenters: Frank Place, Director, CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions and Markets, IFPRI The pro-WEAI is a new survey-based index that builds on the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) and is adapted for project use with a closer focus on aspects of empowerment related to health and nutrition. The index is being developed by IFPRI’s Gender, Agriculture, and Assets Project, Phase 2 (GAAP2), a learning and capacity-building initiative working with 13 agricultural development projects, which is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Feed the Future (led by USAID), and the CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (A4NH). The GAAP2 team will introduce the latest version of the pro-WEAI as a measure of women’s empowerment and orient potential users to the WEAI Resource Center. Panelists representing organizations that are potential users of pro-WEAI will discuss how the tool can support knowledge management in their projects. The discussion will also solicit feedback from the broader development community, including donors, NGOs, and the private sector, about pro-WEAI’s usefulness in promoting women’s empowerment in agricultural projects and as part of national statistical surveys, and further discuss what policy implications can be derived from these analyses.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Ag, Structural Transformation and Poverty Reduction - 10/22/2018 - RBertram | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:20

Discussant Robert Bertram, Chief Scientist, Bureau for Food Security, USAID Agricultural development has traditionally been among the most effective tools for reducing poverty and central to development efforts. But does this still stand today, as countries have urbanized and the world has opened up? This seminar will present key results from a recent Special Issue of World Development that add important nuances to our understanding of the critical relationship between agriculture, structural transformation and poverty reduction. Using a variety of analytical techniques, the authors, including IFPRI researchers, address the relative effectiveness of agricultural growth in reducing poverty, who benefits, where it works best, and how financing affects the outcomes.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Ag, Structural Transformation and Poverty Reduction - 10/22/2018 - WMartin | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:13:28

Agricultural development has traditionally been among the most effective tools for reducing poverty and central to development efforts. But does this still stand today, as countries have urbanized and the world has opened up? This seminar will present key results from a recent Special Issue of World Development that add important nuances to our understanding of the critical relationship between agriculture, structural transformation and poverty reduction. Using a variety of analytical techniques, the authors, including IFPRI researchers, address the relative effectiveness of agricultural growth in reducing poverty, who benefits, where it works best, and how financing affects the outcomes.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Ag, Structural Trans & Poverty Reduction - 10/22/2018 - LChristiaensen | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:18:28

Agricultural development has traditionally been among the most effective tools for reducing poverty and central to development efforts. But does this still stand today, as countries have urbanized and the world has opened up? This seminar will present key results from a recent Special Issue of World Development that add important nuances to our understanding of the critical relationship between agriculture, structural transformation and poverty reduction. Using a variety of analytical techniques, the authors, including IFPRI researchers, address the relative effectiveness of agricultural growth in reducing poverty, who benefits, where it works best, and how financing affects the outcomes.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Ag, Structural Transformation & Poverty Reduction - 10/22/2018 - IWalker | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:01:50

Agricultural development has traditionally been among the most effective tools for reducing poverty and central to development efforts. But does this still stand today, as countries have urbanized and the world has opened up? This seminar will present key results from a recent Special Issue of World Development that add important nuances to our understanding of the critical relationship between agriculture, structural transformation and poverty reduction. Using a variety of analytical techniques, the authors, including IFPRI researchers, address the relative effectiveness of agricultural growth in reducing poverty, who benefits, where it works best, and how financing affects the outcomes.

 PIM Seminar Series: Measuring policy distortions along agricultural value chains 10/17/2018 - | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:56:12

Policy distortions to agricultural incentives can affect different value chain actors in different ways. For example, an export tax may help domestic maize consumers by decreasing the price of maize and increasing the availability of supply in the domestic market, but such a policy may hurt smallholder producers by decreasing their profit margins. In this webinar, Dr. Simla Tokgoz (IFPRI) is sharing new research findings on the analysis of policy distortions to agricultural incentives along selected value chains in four countries: Ethiopia, India, Nigeria, and Tanzania. More about the webinar: http://bit.ly/DistortionsValueChainsWebinar

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - JMcGovern | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:18

Speaker: Jim McGovern, Congressman for the 2nd District of Massachusetts and Co-Chair of the House Hunger Caucus joins the Policy Event. FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - TRawe | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:05:14

Panelists Tonya Rawe, Global Policy Lead for Food and Nutrition Security, CARE International FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Discussion on the Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - KKosec | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:05:41

Panelists Katrina Kosec, Senior Research Fellow, IFPRI FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - JMcArthur | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:06:32

Panelists John McArthur, Senior Fellow - Global Economy and Development, Brookings Institution FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - MvanNieuwkoop | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:33

Keynote Speaker Martien van Nieuwkoop, Director, Agriculture Global Practice, World Bank FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - MCantillo | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:14:46

Presentation of the Report’s Key Findings: Marco Sanchez Cantillo, Deputy-Director, Agricultural Development Economics, FAO FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: Key Findings of FAO’s 2018 SOFI Report - 10/10/2018 - VSharan | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:06:26

Remarks Vimlendra Sharan, Director of FAO’s Liaison Office for North America FAO’s 2018 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report highlights that for the third consecutive year global hunger has risen, now standing at 821 million people today compared to 804 million last year. This three-year increase represents a reversal of nearly a decade of positive trends in the fight against global hunger. According to the report, which offers a significant update on the shifting global milieu that is affecting people's food security and nutrition, climate variability and conflict are among the key drivers of this worsening trend.

 IFPRI Policy Seminar: The Future of the Commons - 10/4/2018 - THilhorst | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:34

Discussant: Thea Hilhorst, Senior Land Governance Specialist, Development Research Group, World Bank 2018 marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of "The Tragedy of the Commons" by Garret Hardin. Its widely accepted message about the inevitable degradation of shared resources prompted privatization or nationalization of much common property. Yet sustainable management of the commons has a long history, and new evidence is increasing our understanding of effective governance of these resources for the future. This policy seminar will discuss recent developments in research and policy on the commons, with particular attention to tenure and governance. Following an overview of key issues, speakers will present the factors that led to the adoption of the UK Commons Act to protect the commons; results of an international review of tenure security of land-based commons, particularly forests and rangelands held by communities and indigenous peoples; new evidence on how tenure can affect investment in shared resources by community members and outsiders; and factors shaping national policies on common resources and implications for the future.

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