Reviews and resources
This article reviews the book 'What Works for the Poorest? Poverty Reduction Programmes for the World’s Extreme Poor', Edited by David Lawson, David Hulme, Imran Matin and Karen Moore. The book provides some important insights into programming experiments that demonstrate that programmes reaching the extreme poor can be implemented, are affordable and cost-effective, and have results.Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
Huda, K. and Simanowitz, A. (2009) ‘A graduation pathway fro Haiti's poorest: Lessons learnt from Fonkoze’, EDM, 20(2).
- Value chain financing: evidence from Zambia on smallholder access to finance for mechanization
- Developing agro-pastoral entrepreneurship: bundling blended finance and technology
- Building frontline market facilitators' capacity: the case of the ‘Integrating Very Poor Producers into Value Chains Field Guide’
- Development impact bonds: learning from the Asháninka cocoa and coffee case in Peru
- Trade-off between outreach and sustainability of microfinance institutions: evidence from sub-Saharan Africa