Strength from diversity in agroecological transitions
CGIAR INITIATIVES Agroecology Primary Impact Area Environmental health & biodiversity Related Impact Areas
CGIAR INITIATIVES Agroecology Primary Impact Area Environmental health & biodiversity Related Impact Areas
CGIAR INITIATIVES Nature-Positive Solutions Primary Impact Area Poverty reduction, livelihoods & jobs Related Impact Areas
CGIAR INITIATIVES Agroecology Primary Impact Area Environmental health & biodiversity Related Impact Areas
CGIAR INITIATIVES Nature-Positive Solutions Primary Impact Area Environmental health & biodiversity Related Impact Areas
CGIAR INITIATIVES Agroecology Primary Impact Area Climate adaptation & mitigation Related Impact Areas
By Murillo Adelaida Leon As the world’s biodiversity losses continue, the need for evidence-based action and cross-sector collaboration has never been more urgent. Biodiversity is fundamental to building climate-resilient, sustainable food, land, and water systems, and to maintain the ecological functions that sustain human well-being. This week, the 27th meeting of the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice
From October 21–23, CGIAR will join global partners in Des Moines, Iowa for the 2025 Borlaug Dialogue, hosted by the World Food Prize Foundation. This year’s theme, “SOILutions for Security,” highlights soil as a living system that underpins food and nutrition security. It underscores the foundational role that healthy soil and agriculture play in sustaining global stability. The focus on
In October 2025, conservationists, policymakers and academics gathered in Abu Dhabi for IUCN’s World Conservation Congress, to establish a 20-year Strategic Vision for nature conservation, titled “United for Nature”. This vision aims to ensure that societies around the world conserve nature’s integrity and diversity, use natural resources equitably and build a just and nature-positive future for all. An important part