Farming for Africa’s future

By Tim Costello, Chief Executive, World Vision Australia

Almost thirty years ago the world was stunned by the scenes of hunger and suffering caused by a devastating famine in Ethiopia. The scenes of starving, stick-like children with distended bellies were seared into the collective memory of a generation – as was the Live Aid concerts that were inspired by the demand for urgent action.

At the same time, in the shadows of these headlines an Australian development worker, Tony Rinaudo, was toiling away in Niger in a tree-planting project. Frustratingly, he found that just about every tree he planted died in the hostile climate of the Maradi region, which included scorching winds of 60-70 kph and soil temperatures up to 60°C.

One day he noticed tufts of scrub poking out from parched landscape where normally nothing grew. On closer inspection he found that they were trees sprouting out from old stumps or mature root systems. By pruning the bushy tufts to two or three stems, they would grow to maturity in a couple of years.

Working with just 12 farmers, he found that growing trees amongst crops increased yields and improved grazing pastures. The trees could also be used for building timber and fuel-wood. Now instead of the women walking for most of the day to gather their cooking fuel, it was at their doorstep.

Tony found the going tough – he was known as “the mad white farmer”. It took the disastrous 1984 famine, that also hit Niger hard, to gain recognition for the initiative and turn things around. Within a year the Maradi region had 500,000 trees. It was to be the start of revolution in farmer managed natural regeneration that would transform large swathes of faming land across the country.

Today 6 million hectares across Niger, over 50% of its farmlands, have been revegetated and the environment repaired.

Tending to goats in Niger (image by flickr user ILRI)

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Strengthening aid to deliver a blow to gender based violence

By Penny Williams, Australia’s Global Ambassador for Women and Girls.

One in three women will experience violence at the hands of men in their lifetime. In the Pacific this is as high as two in three – two-thirds of the female population experiencing violence from husband, partner, family or friend.

Violence against women is a fundamental social and development issue.

Gender equality is the focus of my visit to the Pacific this week. I will be one member of a bipartisan delegation led by the Parliamentary Secretary for Pacific Island Affairs, Richard Marles. Deputy Leader of the Opposition Julie Bishop, Coalition MP Teresa Gambaro and Government MP Bernie Ripoll will also take part in the trip. Our delegation will visit the Solomon Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Tuvalu and Samoa.

As well as meeting heads of government and other ministers, we are holding talks with women parliamentarians, women’s groups and will visit Australian-funded programs to promote women and girls’ empowerment.

Gender inequity and the violence that attends it must be tackled head on for developing nations to reach their full potential. As long as violence against women continues, women, their children, their families, whole communities and whole nations are at risk of entrenched poverty and suffering.

Australia has taken a leadership role in strategies to address gender inequality across the globe. It is both the right thing and the smart thing to do. If we don’t address gender inequality, we cannot deliver a more effective aid program. Nor can we deliver on our commitment to the Millennium Development Goals by 2015.

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Crunching the numbers on gender violence

By Dereck Rooken-Smith, Assistant Director General, Office of Development Effectiveness, AusAID

This week is the second half of the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence, a global campaign to raise awareness of gender-based violence as a human rights issue. The Office of Development Effectiveness is also turning its attention to gender equality, which is the subject of an upcoming ODE independent evaluation.

To promote discussion and inform the design of the evaluation, ODE commissioned five think pieces on issues around the achievement of Millennium Development Goal 3 – promoting gender equality and empowering women.

Four women with their arms around each other. Each woman is wearing a t-shirt with one of these messages: Respect me, Protect me, Support me, and Hear me.

International Women's Day 2011 Honiara, Solomon Islands (photo by Jeremy Miler)

Given that freedom from violence is so important to women’s empowerment, it is perhaps surprising that the MDG goal doesn’t incorporate an indicator that tells us whether gender violence is increasing or decreasing. In her piece, Dr Christine Bradley argues that robust data on violence against women is the fuel for advocacy and for action, yet finds we are missing the vital statistics that tell us about the scope and impact of the problem. Violence, especially between intimate partners, is notoriously under reported in police and hospital figures. Methods for measuring violence against women at national level were simply not well enough developed at the time the goals were being written. Instead, MDG 3 focuses on achieving education parity between boys and girls and increasing the number of women in waged employment and elected to formal decision making bodies.

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Supporting food security and rural development in Indonesia

By Jacqui De Lacy, Minister-Counsellor AusAID, Jakarta

While Indonesia is succeeding in reducing poverty, it is still an enormous challenge. Over one third of Indonesian children are stunted due to inadequate nutrition. Around 120 million Indonesians live on less than $2 day. They spend the bulk of this money on food. This means that even small movements in food prices can have devastating impacts.

Close up photo of a pair of hands holding up a handful of peanuts.

Improving rural growth is critical for equitable development across Indonesia (photo by Josh Estey).

Many of these people live in rural areas and work as agricultural labourers to make a living. But while they might grow rice or other crops each day, what they bring home is barely enough to feed their own families.

Changing weather patterns, increased demand for food crops globally and vulnerability to natural disasters is pushing up food prices. Food security is therefore a major challenge for Indonesia and Australia is helping them address that challenge.

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