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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category From Ethiopia.
  • Integrated Approach Helps “Model Farmers” Increase Productivity in Ethiopia

    ›
    March 24, 2011  //  By Schuyler Null
    Grar Gaber

    To reach the village of Grar Gaber from Addis Ababa, you drive up over the Entoto Mountains overlooking the capital then motor down two hours of new Japanese-built highway to the town of Fiche. From there it’s 20 minutes on a broken dirt road across rocky hills. I was joined there by about 20 others from the PHE Ethiopia Consortium’s general assembly (see day one and day two coverage here) and Population Action International, to visit an integrated population, health, and environment (PHE) development program run by LEM Ethiopia.

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  • The Continuing Challenges of Integrated Development

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    March 20, 2011  //  By Schuyler Null
    PHE Ethiopia Consortium Conference

    “How are we going to feed all these mouths?” asked Bekele Hambissa, director of the Environmental Protection and Development Organization in Addis, on day two of the PHE Ethiopia Consortium general assembly (read about day one here). Environmental resources are directly tied to Ethiopia’s population growth, said Hambissa, during a discussion of balancing efforts to address population growth, environment, and livelihoods. While poverty alleviation is an important goal of population, health, and environment integration (PHE), it must be environmentally sustainable, he said.

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  • “Better Bang for the Buck”: Blogging From Ethiopia’s Population, Health, and Environment General Assembly

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    March 18, 2011  //  By Schuyler Null
    Addis Ababa skyline

    Hello from Addis Ababa, where I am blogging from the 5th annual general assembly of the Population, Health, and Environment (PHE) Consortium of Ethiopia (see further coverage here). Along with the Philippines, Ethiopia is the largest PHE programmer in the world, both in terms of number of programs and people affected, and for good reason: The country combines dire need, willing donors, and a great deal of local capacity and will.

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