Digitizing the gender: transformative and integrated Agriculture-Nutrition-Marketing interventions for efficient extension and communication services in Northern Ghana
- From
-
Published on
11.09.23
- Impact Area
In the ever-evolving landscape of rural extension and community development, adopting digital data collection and monitoring tools has emerged as a game-changer. Community-Based Extension Agents (CBEAs) and Community Health Officers (CHOs) play a crucial role in the grassroots implementation of the Generating Revenues and Opportunities for Women to Improve Nutrition in Ghana (GROWING) project which is led by the International Potato Center and co-implemented with CARE International, the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, and Ghana Health Services.
Related news
-
Bridging knowledge systems: Indigenous practices for sustainable foodways
The Alliance of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT)21.10.25-
Environmental health & biodiversity
-
Gender equality, youth & social inclusion
Indigenous peoples’ food systems have existed for millennia: far longer than the industrialised fo…
Read more -
-
Maisha Makutano, Kenya’s new edutainment series, features ILRI’s gender and livestock research
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)12.10.25-
Gender equality, youth & social inclusion
When researchers from the gender team at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) met t…
Read more -
-
Closing Gender Gaps for Resilient Agrifood Systems
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA)12.10.25-
Gender equality, youth & social inclusion
As the world marks the 2025 International day of Rural Women and approaches the International…
Read more -