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ILEIA’s contribution to upscaling agroecology

  • Since December 1984 ILEIA produced 127 issues of Farming Matters
  • ILEIA collaborated in magazine making with twelve regional partner organisations
  • Together the magazines are produced one global, five regional and seven local language editions and in eleven languages
  • The magazines are read in every country of the world (according to Google)
  • Together they reach (substantially) more than a million readers per quarter, in digital and paper format
  • The total production cost per magazine per reader is less than one Euro
  • Since 1984 ILEIA collaborated with at least 2000 authors who contributed articles to Farming Matters
  • The outreach of their articles was up to 100 times higher than they would have got through a scientific journal
  • About 50 editors worked in ILEIA since 1984
  • Lastly, ILEIA worked with dozens of farmer philosophers, champions of agroecology, SRI, NPM, FMNR, and so on… Inspiring people whose contribution to sustainable development cannot be captured in simple figures and numbers.

136 Problématiques abordées dans cette publication (Affichage des numéro 8003 - 7025) |

FM 2009 LEISA Magazine Vol 25 #2 - 20/06/2009

  • Supportive policies secure a future for family farming
  • Adding value to local livelihoods
  • Creating conditions for growth
  • Plenty of fruit, but also plenty of hurdles
  • Supportive policies secure a future for family farming
  • For these women, money does grow on (neem) trees
  • It works to work together
  • Bees, trade - and success
  • Market Access Centres make the difference
  • Enabling entrepreneurship:  Conditions and constraints
  • Helping credit do its job

FM 2009 LEISA Magazine Vol 25 #3 - 20/09/2009

  • Women participate, everybody benefits
  • Technology alone is not enough - Uganda
  • Big business in the forest - Liveria
  • How can Africa feed itself?
  • Getting food sovereignty and women's rights onto the political agenda - Brazil
  • If you don't save seed, you are not a real farmer - Mozamibique
  • Sovereignty on the market - food for sale
  • Cuba's success story
  • Women and land after conflict in Rwanda

FM 2009 Farming Matters Vol 25 #4 - 20/12/2009

  • The future of family farming
  • The Sahel gets green
  • Seducing the scientist
  • The glass is half full
  • More from less, from less to more
  • Moving pictures
  • The future of family farming
  • Building on success
  • No one-size-fits-all in extension

FM 2010 Farming Matters Vol 26 #1 - 20/03/2010

  • Food as a universal right
  • Livestock services to family farmers: free or fee?
  • Unpacking a poultry myth (improved breeds)
  • Re-assessing the fodder problem
  • The Future of Family Farming
  • Pastoralism: Shifts in policy-making
  • Crops and animals in Tajikistan: Back on track

FM 2010 Farming Matters Vol 26 #2 - 20/06/2010

  • The philosophy of slow growth
  • Local resources:  great capital
  • Big problems demand big ambitions
  • Ensuring finance with a contract
  • Thinking beyond credit
  • Money for farming
  • Making farmers bandable
  • Should farmers get paid for providing ecosystem services
  • Trade finance
  • Rural finance

FM 2010 Farming Matters Vol 26 #3 - 20/09/2010

  • Traditional water governance in Nepal
  • Holland's water boards
  • The role of a local committee in changing times
  • Land grabs are cheap deals for rich countries
  • Running water uphill with a ram pump
  • Water is everybody's business
  • What does good water governance mean
  • Water services that address multiple priorities

FM 2010 Farming Matters Vol 26 #4 - 20/12/2010

  • Planning outcomes in detail
  • More opportunities for scaling up in Central America
  • GMOs are a serious threat to local breeds
  • Enhancing learning within certification schemes
  • Teaching teachers: agroecology in Argentina
  • Can family farmers benefit from bio-fuels?
  • Farmer Field Schools take root in Eqypt
  • A look at VECO's planning
  • World Bank - land grabs

FM 2011 Farming Matters Vol 27 #1 - 20/03/2011

  • Reclaiming agriculture for Pacific youth
  • We know what to do
  • "Anchored" education promises better results
  • Meeting a region's broad development needs
  • Youth's perceptions are the starting point
  • The many possibilities of ICTs in African agriculture
  • How do we make markets work for the poor?
  • Teaching around the globe
  • Food and nutrition: A delicious revolution

FM 2011 Farming Matters Vol 27 #2 - 20/06/2011

  • The TREES experience in Sao Paulo
  • Where there are no trees
  • Payments or rewards
  • A long term perspective:  the Wanakaset concept
  • Trees and farming
  • Rights and ownership: "It's our forest"
  • Planting trees, rooting awareness
  • Seed management: a farmer friendly method
  • Quantities vs quality

FM 2011 Farming Matters Vol 27 #3 - 20/09/2011

  • San Isidro's "Food Circle"
  • Let's go local
  • No longer neglected
  • Incredible Edible Todmorden: Eating the street
  • Regional food systems
  • Promotion more sustainable diets
  • Breaking down barriers to intra-regional trade
  • Brazil's Food Acquisition Programme
  • Food Reserves

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