Ejemplares similares: Vulnerability of Nigerian maize traders to a confluence of climate, violence, disease and cost shocks
- Women's vulnerabilities to climate insecurity and violence: Household-level evidence from Bangladesh
- Rural household vulnerability and COVID-19: Evidence from India
- Subjective well-being, willingness to accept COVID policies, and vulnerability: Evidence from China
- Assessing the vulnerability of West and Central African countries to COVID-19
- “Essential non‐essentials”: COVID‐19 policy missteps in Nigeria rooted in persistent myths about African food supply chains
- Unpacking the reported impacts of COVID-19 in rural contexts: evidence from two rural municipalities in South Africa
Autor: Vargas, Carolina M.
Autor: Liverpool-Tasie, Lenis Saweda O.
- Fertilizer subsidies, political influence and local food prices in sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Nigeria
- Governing informality: Drivers of service provision in Nigeria's food wholesale markets
- Productivity effects of sustainable intensification: The case of Urea deep placement for rice production in Niger State, Nigeria
- Quiet Revolution by SMEs in the midstream of value chains in developing regions: Wholesale markets, wholesalers, logistics, and processing
- Rapid transformation in aquatic food value chains in three Nigerian states
- Outsource agrifood service MSMEs facilitating pivoting by fruits & vegetables farmers, wholesalers, and retailers