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Project Summary
The 2001-03 crisis in Southern Africa was
a symptom of the increasing vulnerability of the mainly rural
population: the climatic variability of the 2001 and 2002
agricultural seasons was less severe than that which precipitated
the last widespread crisis in the region in 1991/92. This
vulnerability stems from more than a decade of failures in
rural growth, affected by poor integration into input, output,
finance and labour markets; the impact of HIV/AIDS; deteriorating
institutional accountability; and the limited availability
of relevant agricultural technology options. In addition,
donor support to agriculture and rural development has declined.
The immediate crisis may abate, but the underlying inability
to cope with shocks will remain until the vulnerability of
the population is addressed.
Key issues are:
- Human vulnerability: how has the
vulnerability context for poor people in the region changed
over the last decade; what are the implications of this
for supporting poverty alleviation and food security;
- Market integration: what are the
prospects and key needs for facilitating participation in
input, output, finance and labour markets in the region;
- Social protection: what combination
of macro and micro safety net interventions are needed to
ensure secure access to food for the very poorest;
- Policy processes: what are governments'
and donors' options for delivering assistance in situations
of constrained institutional capacity.
The Forum for Food Security in Southern Africa
has supported strategic thinking on these food security issues
in Southern Africa by providing a platform for specialists
and key policy stakeholders from the international and regional
research community, governments, donors, NGO, civil society
and private sector with identified specialist knowledge of
the issues and the region. The project has produced a variety
of country and regional papers and hosted moderated electronic
discussions. The purpose of the
Forum is to support initiatives by governments and donors
to improve food security in the region. The work has focused
on five countries - Lesotho, Malawi,
Mozambique, Zambia
and Zimbabwe - representative of
a range of food security contexts across the region.
The Forum has the facility to generate tailor-made
contributions to national and regional food security policy
processes on demand from national and regional stakeholders
and in collaboration with them. For
details of planned outputs and full documents as they are
produced, see the Forum publications
page.
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