Africare Food Security Review
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Photo credit: R. Wilson |
A clearing house for sharing Africare's Title II food security |
Managing Editor: Leah A.J. Cohen
Editorial Advisors: Della E. McMillan, Harold V. Tarver, and Bonaventure B. Traoré
Introduction
Over the past 20 years, since its first Institutional Capacity Building (ICB) grant from the United States Agency for International Development, Office of Food for Peace (USAID FFP), Africare has focused on learning from its experience designing and implementing Title II food security initiatives and its applied research and collaboration with a number of leading, African, regional and national centers of excellence. Africare has also focused considerable effort on harmonizing monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems between its different country programs. Africare designed the Africare Food Security Review (AFSR) paper series as a forum in which to publish important findings and tools from Africare's Title II food security programs. One of the most important aims of this series is to provide a user-friendly mechanism through which Cooperating Sponsors (CS) can access and use the reports and tools published in the series in design, implementation, and M&E of their own Title II food security initiatives. This is another step on the road to meeting objectives stated by USAID FFP related to improving the capacity of Title II Cooperating Sponsors and beneficiary communities through sharing of information and lessons learned.
Types of Technical Paper in Series
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1) Guidance documents are manuals that provide clear, step-by-step instructions for using or adapting the tools for assessing program impacts. Examples include the Success Stories Guidance, the Food Security Community Capacity Index (FSCCI) Guidance, and the Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning based on Participatory Rural Appraisals (MAHFP-PRA) Guidance.
2) Briefs are designed to distill the important and cross-cutting lessons from Africare's longer field and evaluation reports. These are meant to get to the meat of the issue in order to reach a wider audience.
3) Critical Resource Information Briefs (CRIBs) are designed to provide a forum for Africare working groups to identify and efficiently respond to areas of urgent need in capacity building. The short format ensures that staff in the field can download and incorporate the information quickly and effectively.
4) Those documents that are not included under the sub-titles of Guidance, Brief, and CRIB are more lengthy and detailed documents on Africare's field experience presented as case studies and comparative research. Each paper provides a summary of the lessons learned that apply not only to Africare's own programs, but also that can be applied to the programs of other Cooperating Sponsors.
Currently Available AFSR Papers
Click on the AFSR Topic Index for a table that cross references AFSR papers (by number) with specific topics useful to Title II Cooperating Sponsors.
For a complete list of all available AFSR papers with their summaries in PDF click here.
For a complete list of AFSR papers with their summaries by year click on the links below.
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Small scale onion cultivation irrigated from Africare rehabilitated well, Burkina Faso Photo credit: R. Wilson. |
MAHFP Data Collection with Mothers, Burkina Faso Photo credit: I. Konda. |
AFSR No. 1: "Guidance: How to Measure the Number of Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning (MAHFP) Based on Participatory Rural Appraisals in Food Security Interventions" (13 pp., 210 KB, PDF) Africare, 2007. |
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| AFSR No. 2: "Guidance: How to Measure the Food Security Community Capacity Index (FSCCI)" (13 pp., 210 KB, PDF) Africare, 2007. | |
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AFSR No. 3: "Draft Guidance: How to Measure the Food Security Program Capacity Index (FSPCI)" (28 pp., 208 KB, PDF) Africare, 2007. |
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AFSR No. 4: "Guidance: How to Compile a Success Story" (13 pp., 632 KB, PDF) Judy C. Bryson and Nicole Eley, 2007. |
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| AFSR No. 5: "Brief: Two Methods for Measuring Household Food Security and Vulnerability—Evidence from the Zondoma Food Security Initiative, Burkina Faso" (5 pp., 84 KB, PDF) Simeon Nanama and Karim Souli, 2007. | |
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AFSR No. 6: "Brief: Community Based Use of the FSCCI to Identify and Manage Risk in Uganda" (11 pp., 114 KB, PDF) Florence Tushemerirwe and Della E. McMillan, 2007. |
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AFSR No. 7: "Use of a Revised Version of the FSCCI to Identify and Manage Health and Nutrition Risks and Vulnerability in Guinea" (12 pp., 131 KB, PDF) Prosper Pogba, Sékou II Condé, Della E. McMillan, and Bonaventure Traoré, 2007. |
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AFSR No. 8: "Identifying and Managing a Major Shock: Case Study of the Title II Funded Guinea Food Security Initiative" (9 pp., 110 KB, PDF) Sidikiba Sidibé, Della E. McMillan, and Bonaventure B. Traoré, 2007. |
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AFSR No. 9: "The Link between Health/Nutrition and Household Vulnerability for Phase II of the Zondoma Food Security Initiative in Burkina Faso: MAHFP as a Tool for Targeting Project Interventions" (12 pp., 105 KB, PDF) Ambroise Nanéma, Jean Parfait Wenceslas Douamba, Koudougou Achile Segda, and Rosine Cissé, 2008. |
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AFSR No. 10: “Comparative Research/Analysis--Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning in Africare’s Title II Food Security Programs” (34 pp., 232 KB PDF) Judy C. Bryson and Leah A.J. Cohen, 2008. |
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AFSR No. 11: “Direct Distribution of Commodities for People Living with HIV/AIDS: Lessons Learned from Rwanda and Burkina Faso” (12 pp., 118 KB PDF) Stacey Maslowsky, Sidikiba Sidibé, and Leah A.J. Cohen, 2008. |
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AFSR No. 12: “The Success of the Hearth Model in Guinea” (17 pp., 202 KB PDF) Stacey Maslowsky, Sidikiba Sidibé, and Bonaventure B. Traoré, 2008. |
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AFSR No. 17: "Guidance: How to Measure the Number of Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning (MAHFP) Based on Quantitative Methods and Isolating Food Aid Provisions" (16 pp., 183 KB, PDF), Issa Konda, Ronaldo Sigauque, and Pascal Payet 2008. |
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AFSR No. 20: "Critical Resource Information Brief (CRIB) #1: Selecting FANTA Indicators for Nutrition Education for People Living with HIV (PLHIV)" (7 pp., 70 KB, PDF), Africare Health, Nutrition, and HIV/AIDS Working Group 2008. |
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This CRIB presents a complete list of FANTA indicators for measuring the impact of nutritional education and counseling tailored specifically to PLHIV. It is intended to assist in development of key tracking indicators for nutrition and education activities that are targeted for and will inevitable impact people living with HIV as the new round of Africare food security projects are initiated in 2009. The indicators and key considerations are presented based on FANTA’s Guide to Monitoring and Evaluation of Nutrition Assessment, Education, and Counseling of People Living with HIV. |
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AFSR No. 21: “Critical Resource Information Brief (CRIB) # 2: Use of FANTA’s Food Assistance Programming in the Context of HIV.” (27 pp., 202 KB PDF) Africare Health, Nutrition, and HIV/AIDS Working Group 2008. |
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This CRIB was developed to provide a condensed overview of the contents of each chapter of the FANTA AND WFP guide “Food Assistance Programming in the Context of HIV” and to note some of the topics and issues that would be of particular interest to Africare. The guide covers a broad range of issues relevant to food assistance in areas of high HIV prevalence, from information on potential donors of programs that integrate food assistance and HIV to monitoring and evaluation systems, from education to emergency response. |
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AFSR No. 22: “Critical Resource Information Brief (CRIB) # 3: Proxy Indicators for Identifying HIV-Affected Households.” 6 pp., 58 KB PDF) Africare Health, Nutrition, and HIV/AIDS Working Group 2008. |
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The CRIB provides a list of proxy indicators from FANTA and WFP (2007), as well as other sources such as Save the Children (2004) and UN WFP (2008), for identifying people living with HIV (PLHIV) and their households. The aim is to provide Africare staff and field staff from other Title II Cooperating Sponsors with the critical information needed to select the most promising and appropriate proxy indicators for identifying HIV-affected individuals and households in a quick reference format. Field teams that intend to more specifically target HIV-affected households in their food security initiatives should use this brief to select a number of proxy indicators to field test and validate. |
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AFSR No. 24: “Use of MAHFP to Track Vulnerability in Households of People Living with HIV (PLHIV) in Food Security Programs in Burkina Faso: A Focus on Food Security Status, Household Risk Factors, and Selected Nutritional Concerns Specific to PLHIV” (31 pp., 284 KB PDF) BADIEL, Baya Valentin; Jean Wenceslas Parfait DOUAMBA; Leah A.J. COHEN; and Manuel TAHYO, 2008. |
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This paper describes the results of a pilot study on how the level of household food security (based on the Months of Adequate Household Food Provisioning [MAHFP] indicator) relates to a number of socio-economic household characteristics and selected nutritional concerns specific to people living with the human immunodeficiency virus (PLHIV) in Africare/Burkina’s Zondoma Food Security Initiative, Phase II (ZFSI II) intervention area. The paper makes recommendations on the types of data that should be collected through routine and specialized questionnaires and interventions that aim to reduce vulnerability of households with PLHIV. It provides the original questionnaire used to gather data for this study, as well as a revised questionnaire to be field tested that takes into consideration the recommendations and lessons learned from this study. |
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AFSR No. 25: “Critical Resource Information Brief (CRIB) # 4: Selecting FANTA/WFP Indicators for Food Programming in the Context of HIV.” (5 pp., 57 KB PDF) Africare Health, Nutrition, and HIV/AIDS Working Group 2008. |
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This CRIB presents a list of the indicators recommended in the Food and Nutrition Technical Assistance project and the World Food Programme guide “Food Assistance Programming in the Context of HIV” for assessing the impacts of food programming on households in HIV-affected areas. This CRIB also briefly presents the most basic factors to consider when developing and selecting M&E indicators for this purpose that are more comprehensively addressed in the FANTA and WFP guide. It is intended as a quick reference to the much more detailed and comprehensive FANTA/WFP guide. |
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These publications were made possible through support provided by the Office of Food for Peace, Bureau of Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance, U.S. Agency for International Development, under the terms of Award No. AFP-a-00-03-00052. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Agency for International Development. |
For comments or questions about this series, please contact Africare's Office of Food for Development:
offd@africare.org.
(Updated, December 12, 2008)























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