Thursday, Nov 21, 2024
Somalia National Livestock Policy 2006 -2016.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 948 downloads
In any given country, it is the role of a Government Ministry to develop appropriate policy guidelines for development of the sector the ministry is involved in. However, development of such policies must involve all the key stakeholders for the guidelines to adequately address real problems and gaps that hinder the development of a sector.
Somalia - children and youth.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 1123 downloads
Since Somalia is very fragmented, politically, economically and socially, the conditions for growing up will vary according to where you actually live in the country. Neither local nor central authorities have the capacity to take measures attending to the needs of children. The conditions under which children grow up are therefore decisively determined by the capacity of the family under the conditions in which they live. The role of the family is crucial, especially when it comes to security, schooling, health, and later on for job opportunities. Access to school and health services varies very much throughout the country, but seems to be best in Somaliland and in Mogadishu.
State of environment in Somalia- a desk study.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 786 downloads
The Indian Ocean Tsunami of 26 December 2004 affected part of Somalia, with most of the damage experiencedin the north-east along a 650 km coastline stretching from Xafuun in the Bari region, to Garacad in theMudug region. About 44,000 people are believed to have been affected by the tsunami.
Subsistence farming in lowe Shabelle riverine Zone.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 2652 downloads
Between late 2010 and early 2012, southern and central Somalia experienced severe food insecurity andmalnutrition precipitated by a prolonged period of drought resulting in the poorest harvests since the 1992-1993famine. The effects of the drought were compounded by various factors including decreased humanitarianassistance and increasing food prices. Furthermore, this emergency occurred against a backdrop of heightenedinsecurity and persistent high levels of acute malnutrition, and affected populations whose resilience mechanismshad already been weakened over the past few years by a protracted crisis featuring a combination of armedconflict, natural disasters and adverse economic conditions. By July 2011, based on criteria established bythe multi-partner Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC, an analysis template used globally fordetermining relative severity of food insecurity), the United Nations declared famine in central Somalia in agropastoralareas of Middle Shebelle and among IDPs in Mogadishu the Afgoye corridor. Based on further dataand analysis, Bay, Bakol agropastoral and Lower Shebelle regions were designated as famine-affected overthe subsequent two months.
The Agricultural Economy of Somalia.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 2643 downloads
Basically an agrarian and pastoral country, Somalia is nearly self-sufficient ingood crop years. But frequent recurring droughts cause food imports to average aquarter or more of total imports over time. Livestock support a large proportion ofthe population and since 1967 have be~n the major export item. Bananas (the secondlargest export) and sugarcane are the principal cash crops. Banana production providesa livelihood for about a quarter of the settled population. Staples of theSomali diet are sorghum, milk, meat, pulses, vegetables, and fruit. Principal foodimports are cereals, cereal preparations, fruits and vegetables, and sugar. Chieffoods imported from the United States are cereals and vegetable oils; chief exportsto the United States are hides and skins. With external assistance, developmentprojects have been aimed at agriculture through the introduction of new crops, diversification,expansion of irrigation, and improvement of marketing facilities andinfrastructure.
The liveligood gap - responding to the economic dynamics of vulnerability in Somalia.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 823 downloads
A "livelihoods gap" has become evident in international aid delivery to Somalia. Existing aid interventions do not address the economic dynamics of vulnerability resulting from Somalia's long history of predatory development and asset stripping.
The Scarcity of land in Somalia.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 1002 downloads
In the past years, Somalia has become the most prominent example of state-failure in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is important to note,however, that not the entire country is plagued by the breakdown of civil and state order.
Towards an inclusice Somalia National Development Plan.pdf
Published on 17 July 2018 Modified on 05 August 2018 By Super User 834 downloads
After the successful implementation of the Somali New Deal Compact, through which Somalia reached a consensus on apathway to promote peacebuilding and statebuilding and set up a number of structures to pursue those goals, theFederal Ministry of Planning & International Cooperation (MOPIC) of the Federal Government of Somalia (FGS) hasrecently finalized the Somalia National Development Plan 2017-2019 (NDP). The plan articulates Governmentdevelopment priorities, providing a structure for resource allocation and management and guiding development partnersupport within the defined FGS priorities in the coming three years.