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the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals, the international community made the
eradication of extreme poverty and hunger one of its primary
targets. Livestock contribute to the livelihoods of an estimated
70% of the world’s rural poor by providing a small but
steady stream of food and income, raising whole farm productivity,
increasing assets and diversifying risks. Livestock also have
an important role in improving the nutritional status of low-income
households, confer status, are of cultural importance, and
create employment opportunities within and beyond the immediate
household.
The increasing demand for animal protein in low- and middle-income
countries provides an opportunity for the rural poor to improve
their livelihoods. However, the nature of livestock farming
is determined by policy and institutional frameworks that
rarely favour of the poor. Therefore, in 2001, the Food
and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations
launched the Pro-Poor Livestock Policy Initiative (PPLPI)
to facilitate and support the formulation and implementation
of livestock-related policies and institutional changes that
have a positive impact on the world’s poor. To achieve
this goal, the Initiative combines stakeholder engagement
with research and analysis, information dissemination, and
capacity strengthening.
A central facility of the PPLPI, funded by the UK Department for International Development, has been established
at FAO headquarters in Rome with the responsibility of guiding
and co-ordinating the Initiative’s activities, and with
the ambition to become a point of reference for livestock-related
pro-poor policy development.
In order to cover the different levels of policy-making,
extending from international, through regional and national
to sub-national levels, and to engage directly with relevant
stakeholders, the Initiative complements the work of the central
facility with active participation in selected policy processes
in a number of strategically chosen ‘focus
regions’.
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