With nearly 420 million children reached worldwide, school meals are among the largest-scale social protection interventions. This paper traces the evolution of school meals programs globally, examines...
In the Gambia, very few children start school with a high level of English, and nearly all speak a variety of national languages. To support the development of a long-term plan for sustainable and efficient...
The development objective of the Resilience, Inclusion, Skills, and Equity Project for The Gambia is to increase: (i) foundational learning of early‐grade students; (ii) access to job‐relevant training...
Some 418 million children worldwide receive at least one school meal per day. However, in developing countries, most school meals are prepared using rudimentary, polluting biomass stove-and-fuel combinations...
Este documento presenta el nuevo Modelo de Alimentación Escolar para las Ruralidades (MAER) que surge desde el reconocimiento de la heterogeneidad territorial y poblacional que existe en el país, y es...
Schools are safe when all students, teachers, and staff can thrive in a welcoming environment that supports learning, health and well-being, and positive relationships. Promoting school safety should consider...
La población objetivo del PAEPI son los NNAJ indígenas matriculados —según el SIMAT— en los establecimientos educativos oficiales del país que atienden población mayoritariamente indígena. Las ETC deben...
Despite the strong role played by the agri-food sector in Guatemala’s economic performance and employment, reflected in high exports and strong results by larger commercial agri-businesses, small producers...
Despite the strong role played by the agri-food sector in Guatemala’s economic performance and employment, reflected in high exports and strong results by larger commercial agri-businesses, small producers...
Motivating service providers to improve the quality of public service delivery is a major development challenge across the globe. This is particularly relevant for women, who are over-represented as providers...