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For further information contact: GIS
Communications
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| The Geographic
Dimensions of Poverty and Food Security
A
special double-issue of the journal Food Policy presents
nine studies on the geographic dimensions of poverty and food
security in developing countries. The initiative, led by the
Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT),
is part of broader efforts by the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
to target research and development on the most vulnerable
of the poor and food insecure. The studies demonstrate the
integration of environmental, economic, and spatial information
using geographic information science and technology.
Researchers employed environmental measures
such as soil quality, water availability, and topographic
conditions in their assessments. They used spatial information,
including measures of accessibility, distance to resources
and facilities, and market integration. These measures were
combined with estimates of household expenditure and numbers
of people below the poverty line. The analyses revealed the
importance of including environmental and spatial factors
in poverty and food security assessments. The digital maps
from the studies are available for download in formats compatible
with geographic information systems (GIS) software (see http://gisweb.ciat.cgiar.org/povertymapping/).
The
studies were carried out in cooperation with the Food and
Agriculture Organization's (FAO)
Food Insecurity and Vulnerability Information and Mapping
Systems (FIVIMS)
initiative, the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)
and the CGIAR Consortium for Spatial Information (CSI).
The governments of Norway, The Netherlands, New Zealand, and
Switzerland funded the research. The
World Bank and the government of the United States provided
funding to the CGIAR researchers to share the results and
data related to this initiative. For more information on poverty
and food security mapping, see http://www.povertymap.net
Contact:
Glenn Hyman
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Workshop
on Mapping Poverty and Food Security
To
develop strategies for reducing poverty and hunger we must
know where the poor are and how food insecurity is distributed.
These are best seen on poverty maps, which spatially represent
poverty assessments. The maps help us improve our understanding
of patterns and processes related to poverty and food security.
Hence, they help us target research and development resources
more efficiently towards the people who need them most. Such
maps are thus valuable tools in our search to reduce poverty.
For
the last 3 years, CIAT has led an initiative to develop country
case studies of mapping poverty and food security. The initiative
is part of a joint effort by CGIAR, FAO, and UNEP to advance
geographic information science and technology in the field
of poverty mapping. This effort ended its first phase in August
2004 with a workshop on "Poverty Mapping: Spatial Analysis
for Poverty Reduction", organized by CIAT.
The
workshop was held in conjunction with the Environmental Systems
Research Institute's (ESRI)
annual user conference in San Diego, California. The Event
included:
- 17
papers on research projects to map poverty and food security
(see map)
- A
gallery of maps on poverty and food security presented by
CGIAR and partners
- A
panel of sustainable development experts who will discuss
future needs and opportunities in the mapping of poverty
and food security
- A
planning session to develop strategies to disseminate results
and advance mapping of poverty and food security
For more information on the workshop, visit the PovertyMap.net
Web site or contact Glenn
Hyman, Workshop Coordinator.
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Latin
America and Caribbean Population Database
The
population of Latin America and the Caribbean nearly tripled
during the last half-century, rising from 175 million people
in 1950 to more than 515 million today. CIAT's population
database is an information resource for analyzing the spatial
dimensions of population change in Latin America and Caribbean.
This year CIAT scientists expanded the database to include
2000-round census data for most of the region and data for
over 16,000 administrative districts.
For
further details on this information resource and links to
interactive maps, metadata and data download, see our Latin
America and the Caribbean Population Project Web Site.
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The
Center Commissioned External Review (CCER) visits Our Project
From
20 to 29 November, the Land Use Project was submitted to an
exhaustive review by an international group of scientists
composing the Center Commissioned External Review (CCER):
Robin Matthews, Cranfield University, United Kingdom; Colin
Chartres, CSIRO Land and Water, Australia; and Tom Veldkamp,
Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands.
The
purpose of this review was to answer 3 basic questions:
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Is the research direction clear and appropiate?
- Are
research activities suitable, given opportunities and constraints?
- Are
activities being implemented effectively?
For
more information about presentations, see our
presentations web page
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| Launching
the Methodology and Tool Package for Rural Planning
Bogotá, 14 November 2003
The CIAT/MADR Agreement
A
robust package of methodologies and tools to help rural communities
plan the future of their municipalities and make decisions
for the sustainable management of natural resources was made
available to Colombians on Friday, 14 November.
The
package comprises products developed by experts at the Centro
Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT) within the framework
of the Agreement for Technical and Scientific Cooperation
with the Colombian Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
(MADR).
CIAT's
Rural Planning team supported the Municipality of Port López,
Department of Meta, in developing the Basic Ordinance Plan
for 2000-2009 and of the development plan for 2001-2004. This
experience permitted the development and fine-tuning of land
planning tools. Training through meetings, workshops, and
seminars was given to functionaries from different regions
of Colombia, who were interested in applying to their respective
municipalities the lessons learned from the successful experiment
carried out in Port López.
The products making up the package are grouped as follows:
- Methodologies
(participatory planning and teledetection to identify degraded
pastures)
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Tools for decision making (systematization; evaluation and
monitoring of land planning processes; database for crops
in Colombia; georeferencing system of indicators for soil
quality and decision trees for land use planning in Orinoquia)
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Geographic information systems (MapMaker and Spring programs)
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Land planning tools
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Web site <http://www.ciat.cgiar.org/planificacion_rural>
and rural planning network
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The book "Los Bosques de Galería: Guía
para su Identificación y Apreciación"
[Gallery forests: a guide to their identification and valuation].
The
celebratory act to launch this package took place at 10 in
the morning, Friday, 14 November, in the principal salon of
the Bogotá Executives Club.
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Challenge
Program on Water and Food
Theme 2: Water and People in catchments
Enabling efficient and equitable water use
CGIAR
Challenge program on
Water and Food interlocking goals are to allow more food
to be produced with the same amount of water that is used
in agriculture today, as populations expand over the coming
20 years and, do this in a way that decreases malnourishment
and rural poverty, improves people's health and maintains
environmental sustainability from a research perspective.
The
program is composed by five interrelated research themes and
nine benchmark basin where the water problems and issues converge,
especially in the developing world. The program involves national
agricultural research centres, advanced research institutes
and non-governmental organizations, giving priority to the
local needs and linking them with the research at the CGIAR
International Centres.
The
five centres leaders of the thematic groups are: CIAT,
IRRI, ICLARM,
IWMI and
IFPRI.
The thematic groups will orientate the research work along
with the benchmark basin coordinators and synthesize the results
from the various countries and regions, and bring out generic
conclusions from the overall research program.
The
International Center of Tropical Agriculture CIAT leads the
Theme 2:
Water and People in catchments
Enabling efficient and equitable water use
since November 2002. The theme objective is to improve sustainable
livelihoods for people who live in, and downstream of upper
catchments through significant, unambiguous improvements of
water productivity and conservancy. You can know more about
the Theme by visiting its web page at Theme
2 Web Site.
Contact: Martha
Fabiola Otero
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Workshop
on Territory and Sustainable Development
An
international workshop aimed at identifying best practices
for rural planning in Latin America will be held at CIAT headquarters
in Cali, Colombia, on 17-20 June 2003. Participants will evaluate
a wide range of participatory approaches to territorial planning,
based on their effectiveness in promoting sustainable, equitable
development.
The
event, organized by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), France's
Institute of Research for Development (IRD),
and CIAT, represents an important step toward the formation
of an action research network dealing with "Territory
and sustainable Development."
For
more information, see the event's
Web site.
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New
Risk Assessment Tool
CIAT
has published version 1 of MarkSimTM: A Computer Tool That
Generates Simulated Weather Data for Crop Modeling and Risk
Assessment. Available on CD-ROM, this new climate database
tool has resulted from more than 20 years of work on simulating
site-specific daily weather, based on data collected by thousands
of weather stations around the world. In an exciting and timely
application of MarkSim, researchers are using it in combination
with other models to predict the effects of global climate
change on staple crops at specific locations in the developing
world (see the
article Tracking the Impact of Global Warming in
our annual report, CIAT in Perspective).
To
order a copy, see our product
catalog.
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| Official
Presentation of the Rural Atlas of Nicaragua
On
the 29th of August 2002, the official presentation of the
Rural Atlas of Nicaragua, in printed and CD form, was made
to a group of donors, international organizations, and institutions
in Nicaragua. The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAGFOR),
the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARENA),
the National Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC), the
Nicaraguan Institute of Territorial Studies (INETER),
and CIAT carried
out the work. Financial support came from the Swiss Agency
for Cooperation and Development (SDC),
the Information for Development Project of the World Bank
(InfoDev), and the Central
American Project of Geographic Information (PROCIG)
of CIAT's Land Use Project.
The
atlas structure is based on digital databases of information,
provided by the institutions involved, and it contains systematized
statistical and mapping information of the rural sector of
Nicaragua. It has been designed as a support tool for decision
taking in the areas of environmental and socioeconomic development
through the relevant information that it brings together on
natural resources, and physical, social, and socioeconomic
aspects at different levels.
The
Rural Atlas of Nicaragua is principally directed at persons
and institutions involved in studies and research on natural
resources, rural development, and poverty alleviation. It
is hoped that, with this tool, geographic information professionals
of Central America will be able to make use of the experiences,
lessons learned, and interchange of information to improve
team work and communication at regional level and between
countries.
Additional
information: PROCIG;
Comunnities
and Watersheds - CIAT
Contact:
Communications-GIS,
Jorge Beltrán
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Initiative
on Poverty and Food Security Mapping
A
new initiative to more efficiently target agricultural research
and development efforts will provide geographic information
to decision makers, scientists, and others interested in the
spatial dimensions of poverty and food security. The project
builds on research and networking capacities of the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO),
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)
and the CGIAR.
Nine CGIAR centers from the CIAT-led Consortium for Spatial
Information (CSI)
will conduct case studies on poverty and food security mapping
for nine countries (see map). Project scientists will use
state-of-the-art spatial analysis methods to map and examine
poverty and food insecurity and to provide information to
a wide range of users. The case studies are part of a broader
effort to improve geographic targeting of research and development
efforts.
(For more information see the project
Web site.)

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FloraMap
Version 1.1 Now Available
CIAT
has published a slightly modified version of this powerful
computer tool for tracking down and conserving plant species
and other potentially useful organisms in the wild. The original
version of the program is already in the hands of hundreds
of biodiversity specialists around the world. Changes in the
program now make it possible to use FloraMap in Europe and
facilitate its application in Asia. For more information see
the FloraMap
Web site.
To order a copy on CD-ROM, see CIAT
products catalog
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Geographic
Information for Agricultural Research and Development
The
CIAT-led Consortium for Spatial Information (CSI)
held an international conference on Geographic Information
for Agricultural Research and Development in Sioux Falls,
South Dakota from May 19th to the 31st, 2001. The EROS
Data Center of the United States Geological Survey hosted
this USAID-funded event. Geographic information science professionals
from over 25 organizations met for 2 weeks to learn how to
serve maps on the Internet, to discuss intellectual property
rights and GIS, and to develop a strategy for future efforts
in geographic information for development. (For more information
see the conference
web site.)
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Land
Use will Execute the Condor Project for the Andean Region
CIAT
and the Corporación Andina de Fomento (CAF)
initiated a new collaborative project with the objective of
developing and integrating a geographic information system
(GIS) for preliminary planning and evaluation of infrastructural
projects in the Andean region. The GIS will be incorporated
in the Corporations Web page. The system will give external
and internal users online access to geographic, economic,
social, and environmental data as a means of alert. The project
will be developed during 2002.
For more information on the project contact: Manuel
Winograd
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Unique Information Tool Kit to Help Improve Environmental
Management in Central America
This
new product, featuring a CD-ROM called Rural Sustainability
Indicators for Central America, gives decision makers an unprecedented
ability to analyze problems in development and the environment,
determine their causes, and weigh the consequences of different
courses of action (See CIAT
news release).
For more information see Enviromental
and Sustainability Indicators Web Site
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Central America Indices
The
development process needs to be analysed at different scales
and in order to obtain a broad perspective about the situation
and trends in Central America, a series of indices were defined
taking into consideration the principal issues related with
rural development in the region. The indices are Land
Use index, Forest
Risk index, Climatic
Risk index, Coastal
Risk index, Water Vulnerability index, Domesticated/Nondomesticated
Land Ratio, Greenhouse Gases index, Nocturnal Light Emission
index, Human Development index, Wealth per Capita, and Accessibility
index.
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National Spatial Data Infrastructures in the Making
Central
American Project Provides Framework for Geographic Information
by
Kate Trinka Lance, Central
American Geographic Information Project Coordinator
New
census data is creating an unprecedented opportunity for progress
in applying information to development in Central America.
GIS specialists in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras,
El Salvador and Guatemala have been working together to integrate
data from their respective agencies. These specialists come
from the national statistics institutes, national geographic
institutes, the ministries of enviroment, and the ministries
of agriculture - 28 institutions in total. These are the primary
goverment data producers. With technical training and support
from the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT),
each country identified a data product that it could put together
as a group and make available to the user community on compact
disk or via the Internet.
For
more information see the
complete article.
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