PUBLICATIONS

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Baseline, Value Chains, & Notab Information Network

Before presenting data and analysis, it should be understood that this report examines life in the rural Grand Anse from the perspective of resiliency and adaptation. People living in the region are adapted to 200-plus years of natural and manmade calamities. Natural calamities include droughts, floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes.

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FdS Haiti, Stove Emissions Testing: Initial Test Results PM 2.5 a nd CO

Haiti burns over 400,000 tons of charcoal annually (USAID 2011); that amount translates to over 4,000,000 tons of trees destroyed since it takes 10 tons of wood to produce one ton of Haitian charcoal (ESMAP 2007). Regional environmental studies in Haiti, including Ghilardi, et al 2018, have determined that the Haitian charcoal industry has a destructive effect on the trees of Haiti.

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UNICEF – Report of the field visit to the Dominican Republic and Haiti by members of the Executive Board

The field visit allowed the delegation to gain a first-hand understanding of UNICEF work at the country level and to view concrete examples of its cooperation with the host Governments and other partners, including the United Nations country team. Furthermore, the visit provided an opportunity for the members of the delegation to better understand the issues regarding children and women and the challenges they face in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

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Le rôle de l’évaluation environnementale stratégique dans la gestion de la vulnérabilité en Haïti

Haïti, État de la Caraïbe, occupe le tiers occidental (27750 km2) de l’île d’Hispaniola, la deuxième plus grande île de la Caraïbe après Cuba. Localisée en pleine trajectoire des cyclones ou ouragans, elle subit fréquemment les épisodes chauds d’El Nino/ENSO. Situé sur une zone de failles tectoniques majeures séparant les plaques Caraïbes et Amérique du Nord, le pays est exposé aux phénomènes naturels extrêmes qui engendrent souvent des catastrophes d’envergure (inondations, sécheresse, tremblement de terre, etc.).

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Enquête Mortalité, Morbidité et Utilisation des Services (EMMUS-VI) 2016-2017. Indicateurs Clés

La sixième Enquête Mortalité, Morbidité et Utilisation des Services (EMMUS-VI 2016- 2017) a été réalisée par l’Institut Haïtien de l’Enfance (IHE) en collaboration avec l’Institut Haïtien de Statistiques et d’Informatique (IHSI). L’EMMUS-VI, commanditée par le Ministère de la Santé Publique et de la Population (MSPP), a bénéficié de l’assistance technique du programme mondial des Enquêtes Démographiques et de Santé (The Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS Program)) d’ICF.

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The Sorghum Value Chain in Haiti: A Mapping and Analysis

Agricultural value chain development has emerged as a key methodology employed by multi- and bilateral donors, nongovernmental organizations, and research institutions to drive economic development. Value chain upgrading can result in significant economic impact in developing countries, contributing up to 30% of gross domestic product (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, 2013). Through a case study of the Smallholders Alliance for Sorghum in Haiti (SMASH), we examine the process of creating an “inclusive” value chain that seeks to explicitly include smallholder producers to increase incomes while establishing a sustainable sorghum value chain.

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IOM Haiti – Border Monitoring Report

This document represents a summary snapshot of monitoring activities conducted by IOM and border monitoring partners at the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. The monitoring was put in place following the movements observed at the border before and after the 17th June 2015 expiration of the registration component of the National Plan for the Regularization of Foreigners (PNRE1 in Spanish), established in the Dominican Republic.

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Résultats enquête sur les cout du loyer à Jérémie et Les Cayes

Faisant suite au passage de l’ouragan Matthew, plusieurs milliers de familles se sont réfugiées dans des centres d’évacuation. Priorité du gouvernement: libérer les espaces destinés préalablement a d’autres usages (écoles, églises, etc.) et faciliter le retour des familles dans des logements décents. Interventions de réparation des abris insuffisantes dans quelques cas (maisons complètement détruites, locataires, etc.).

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