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Partners for resilience midterm

Mid term review of the Partners for Resilience Program Read More...

Lagafa draft evaluation final report revised 2 april 2013

An End of Project Review Report for a Local and Global Action for Food Security Project in Africa (L... Read More...

Final sisp evaluation

CARE Somalia implemented the Somalia IDP Support Program (SISP) from January 2012 to February 2013 i... Read More...

South darfur emergency assistance program (nutrition) post program evaluation report

The South Darfur Emergency Assistance Programme (NUTRITION) has been carried by CARE International F... Read More...

Eel care uganda heal evaluation report

In December 2011 CARE International in Uganda secured funding for 3 months and later for one year fo... Read More...

Gia report care comaco 18feb2013

compromises of findings of the Gender Impact Assessment Report on a Natural Resource Project. Read More...

Nuwylei baseline final report

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Karamoja situational analysis – final report 29.01.2013

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Gender and Power Analysis: Mudansa Klimatika iha Ambiente Seguru (MAKA’AS) Project

CARE’s Mudansa Kilimatica iha Ambiente Seguru (MAKA’AS) project aims to build the adaptive capacity of women and men in vulnerable households living in seven sukos in Liquiça District on two highly degraded watersheds. The project goal is to increasing resilience to the impacts of climate change through improved water management and water resource protection, improved land management and agricultural practices and micro-to-meso level processes that support natural resource management at the watershed level. The project will be implemented by a consortium led by CARE with WaterAid and four local partners; Centro do Desenvolvimento da Economia Popular (CDEP), Naroman Timor Foun (NTF), Malaidoi, and Hafoun Timor Lorosae (HTL).

The Gender Analysis found that men and women often shared productive workload, although there were some gender specific activities such as fishing for men and seed storage for women. Men and women share the burden of agricultural work, coffee harvesting and caring for home gardens. However, in terms of the domestic or reproductive sphere there is generally little change from traditional gender roles where women care for children, cook and clean and pay attention to household food security. Men are starting to undertake some household tasks such minding children and collecting water but addressing the burden of work shouldered by women within the household is essential in order to enable them to participate in other community activities. Women’s and men’s roles mean they will be affected differently by climate change with women likely to be more concerned with the health and household food security impacts. Read More...

Kirumara final evaluation

Kirumara II project is funded by the Austrian Government (ADA) and CARE International Austria. This ... Read More...

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