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Plant with Purpose

Plant With Purpose (formerly known as Floresta) is a Christian nonprofit organization that works in developing countries around the world with the goal of improving the quality of the lives of people living in extreme rural poverty.[1] Plant With Purpose uses a transformational development approach that brings together environmental restoration, economic empowerment, and spiritual renewal.[2] Plant With Purpose currently works in more than 1,100 communities in eight countries across Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.[3]

Plant With Purpose
Founded1984
TypeNon-governmental organization
Location
Area served
Burundi
Dominican Republic
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Ethiopia
Haiti
Mexico
Tanzania
Thailand
Key people
Scott Sabin (Executive Director)
Revenue
$5.5M
Websitewww.plantwithpurpose.org

History edit

Plant With Purpose was founded in 1984 under the original name Floresta.[4] Tom Woodard and his colleagues had travelled to the Dominican Republic to volunteer with an agency doing relief work. According to Woodard, food aid alone would not solve long-term problems caused by deforestation and desperate farming practices that depleted the soil.[5] He realized that farmers needed sustainable methods to meet their immediate needs while also working toward long-term restoration of the land. In response, Woodard developed Floresta to meet the environmental, economic, and spiritual needs of rural communities in the Dominican Republic. Today, Plant With Purpose operates in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,[6] the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Burundi, Haiti, Mexico, Tanzania, and Thailand.[7]

Timeline edit

1984 Floresta Dominican Republic is founded.[8]

1997 Floresta Haiti is founded.

1999 Misión Integral (Floresta Mexico) is founded.

2004 Floresta Tanzania is founded.

2006 Plant With Purpose first uses the Village Savings and Loan Association (VSLA) method.[9]

2008 Floresta and Upland Holistic Development Project (UHDP) form a partnership in the northern hills of Thailand.

2008 Floresta Burundi becomes the sixth international program.

2010 Floresta is renamed Plant With Purpose.

2012 Plant With Purpose reaches 8 million trees planted worldwide.[10]

2015 Plant With Purpose launches program in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

2015 Plant With Purpose reaches 16 million trees planted worldwide.

2018 Plant With Purpose launches program in Ethiopia.

2021 Plant With Purpose reaches 40 million trees planted worldwide.

Rural poverty edit

Today more than 85% of the world's poorest people, or roughly 1.4 billion people live in rural, isolated areas, limiting their access to basic resources.[11][12] Most rural communities depend on the land for their livelihood and survival. Members of these rural communities often have limited access to financial services like savings and credit, and struggle to procure adequate resources. This makes them extremely vulnerable to external shocks, such as natural disasters, family emergencies, poor crop yields, and civil unrest.[11] Without an established safety net, external shocks can cause rural families to fall deeper into a cycle of poverty.

When left with few options to generate needed income, rural farmers often cut trees to create more farmland or to use or sell as fuelwood.[13] This cycle of deforestation degrades soil, damages habitats and biodiversity, and further exacerbates the problems of rural poverty.

Methodology edit

 
Three-part environmental, economic, and spiritual approach to sustainable development

Plant With Purpose employs a three-part approach for transformational community development that addresses environmental restoration, economic empowerment, and spiritual renewal.[14][15] The overarching strategy is to provide training and tools that equip rural communities to develop and utilize their own talents and resources to reverse the effects of poverty.

Environmental restoration edit

Areas suffering from rural poverty often suffer from environmental degradation as well.[11] Partnering communities receive agricultural training and plant trees to establish reforestation and sustainable farming techniques. The small-scale farmers within these communities can then work to restore the environment while simultaneously producing more income and crop yields.

Economic empowerment edit

Plant With Purpose uses the Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLA) model, created by CARE, to provide a sustainable form of microfinance that allows participants to build capital.[16] This savings-led approach equips self-elected groups to create a financial safety net by saving their own money and making small loans to individuals within the group.[17] The group decides on a fair interest rate, which then go back to the group and increase overall savings.

Spiritual renewal edit

Plant With Purpose partners with local churches to develop local leadership and support discipleship efforts. Plant With Purpose also uses a formal program[18] designed to mobilize congregations to be agents of change in their communities by finding solutions to existing needs using local resources. Spiritual programs also tie back into environmental restoration through connection to creation care.

While Plant With Purpose is a Christian organization that works with local churches and Christian leaders as a component of community interactions, participation in its programs is not contingent on religious affiliation, nor does it require participation in Bible studies or church services. Plant With Purpose's Theology of Work curriculum in Burundi is also taught in local mosques and helps facilitate reconciliation in communities.

International impact edit

Burundi edit

In 2008, Plant With Purpose began working in Burundi after the end of a long period of violent conflict.[19] Burundi is one of the five poorest countries in the world and has been rated the hungriest country in the world.[20]

Democratic Republic of the Congo edit

In July 2015, Plant With Purpose launched its seventh country program in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Serving over 6,500 families in 38 communities; focuses on promoting prosperity and peace following the civil war. Working in the areas of greatest environmental degradation in the Kakumba watershed, which is located on the northwest edge of Lake Tanganyika. These rapidly disappearing forests are home to the endangered Eastern Mountain Gorilla.[6]

Dominican Republic edit

The Dominican Republic is the first country Plant With Purpose partnered with and has been the longest-running program to date. Of those living in rural Dominican areas, 57% live below the poverty line.[21]

Ethiopia edit

Plant with Purpose is serving over 800 families in 90 communities in Ethiopia; focuses on protecting ancient church forests in the Amhara region.

Haiti edit

Haiti is recognized as the poorest country in the western hemisphere and has one of the world's highest rates of deforestation.[22][23] The country is still recovering following a magnitude-7.0 earthquake in 2010. Plant With Purpose has been working in rural Haitian communities since 1997. In rural areas, 88% of Haitians are considered poor (living on less than $2 a day), and 67% are extremely poor (living on less than $1.25 a day).[24]

Mexico edit

Plant With Purpose has worked in Oaxaca, Mexico with indigenous communities since 1996 and began working in the neighbouring state of Chiapas in 2012. Oaxaca and Chiapas are two of the three poorest states in Mexico.[25] In Mexico, 61% of rural families live below the poverty line, while 75% of the indigenous population live in poverty.[26] Nearly 25% of this population group - mainly the men - has migrated to the U.S. and other parts of Mexico, leaving many women to provide for themselves and their children.[27]

Tanzania edit

Plant With Purpose began working with communities in the Mt. Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania in 2004. The majority of Tanzanian farmers who partner with Plant With Purpose are women.[28] In Tanzania, 98% of rural women who are economically active depend on the land for survival through agriculture.[29][30]

Thailand edit

In 2008, Plant With Purpose began a partnership with an existing organization called the Upland Holistic Development Project (UHDP). The focus of the program is helping marginalized hill tribe communities in Thailand’s northern hills. The northern hill tribe communities of Thailand consist of hundreds of thousands of refugees. The majority of ethnic hill tribes people came to Thailand to escape civil strife in Myanmar (Burma).

Highlights edit

In 2010, Plant With Purpose's Executive Director, Scott Sabin, published Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God's People.[2][31] Tending to Eden offers a global perspective on the theological foundation for caring for the earth and its people.[31]

In February 2013, an organization called Wings of Kilimanjaro organized a group of almost 100 para-gliders to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro and fly from the top.[32] The group raised funds for three nonprofits working in Tanzania, including Plant With Purpose.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mission. (2012). Plant With Purpose. http://www.plantwithpurpose.org/mission
  2. ^ a b Sabin, S. (2010). Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God's People. Judson Press: Valley Forge, PA.
  3. ^ Plant With Purpose Global Villages 2014. 2015. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "History and Philosophy". Plant With Purpose.
  5. ^ Agriculture and Rural Development: Soil Degradation. (2013). The World Bank. http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTARD/0,,contentMDK:20452551~pagePK:148956~piPK:216618~theSitePK:336682,00.html
  6. ^ a b "2015 Fall Sower". Scribd. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
  7. ^ Annual Report July 2011-June 2012. (2012). Plant With Purpose: San Diego, CA.
  8. ^ "Nonprofit Profile , Floresta USA". San Diego Business Journal. 2006-10-22. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  9. ^ "VSL Associates". vsla.net. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  10. ^ Lee, M. (2012). Nonprofit Group Marks 8 Millionth Tree Planted. UT San Diego News. http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/sep/05/tp-nonprofit-group-marks-8-millionth-planted-tree/?print&page=all
  11. ^ a b c Rural Poverty Report 2011. (2010). International Fund for Agriculture Development (IFAD). http://www.ifad.org/rpr2011/report/e/overview.pdf.
  12. ^ Alkire, Sabina; Conconi, Adriana; Seth, Suman; Vaz, Ana (June 2014). "Global Multidimensional Poverty Index 2014" (PDF). Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative.
  13. ^ Environment and Natural Resource Management Paper. (2002). International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). http://www.ifad.org/pub/enviorn/EnvironENG.pdf
  14. ^ Alford, D. (2009). Trees of Life: How Floresta integrates development discipleship, and creation care overseas. http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2009/november/32.54.html?start=2
  15. ^ Sabin, S. (2012). Getting to the Root of Poverty. Huffington Post: Impact. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-sabin/getting-to-the-root-of-poverty_b_2074403.html
  16. ^ VSLA Model. (2012). VSL Associates. http://vsla.net/aboutus/vslmodel
  17. ^ Small Wonder: A new model of microfinace for the very poor is spreading. The Economist. http://www.economist.com/node/21541429
  18. ^ UMOJA. (2013). Tearfund International Learning Zone. http://tilz.tearfund.org/Churches/Umoja/
  19. ^ Burundi Profile. (2012). BBC News: Africa. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-13085064
  20. ^ Grebmer, K. V., et al. (2012). Global Hunger Index: The Challenge of Hunger: Ensuring Sustainable Food Security Under Land, Water, and Energy Stress. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/ghi12.pdf
  21. ^ Dominican Republic:Country Strategic Opportunities Programme. (2010). International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). http://www.ifad.org/gbdocs/eb/99/e/EB-2010-99-R-10.pdf
  22. ^ The World Factbook: Haiti. (2013). The Central Intelligence Agency. https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/haiti/
  23. ^ McDermott, M. (2009). 10 Countries With the Highest Deforestation Rates in the World. Tree Hugger. http://www.treehugger.com/corporate-responsibility/10-countries-with-the-highest-deforestation-rates-in-the-world.html
  24. ^ Rural Poverty in Haiti. (2012). Rural Poverty Portal. http://www.ruralpovertyportal.org/country/home/tags/haiti
  25. ^ Mexico Poverty at a Glance (Fact Sheet). (2010). U.S. Embassy, Mexico City. https://photos.state.gov/libraries/mexico/895/pdf/2010_Poverty_Fact_Sheet.pdf.
  26. ^ Enabling Poor Rural People to Overcome Poverty in Mexico. (2012). International Fund for Agricultural Development. http://www.ifad.org/operations/projects/regions/pl/factsheet/mexico_e.pdf
  27. ^ "Measuring the Impact of ICF-supported Productive Employment Projects in Oaxaca (2011)". International Community Foundation.
  28. ^ Huizenga, C., & Luthye, B. (2013). The Sower: Female Farming. Plant With Purpose. https://www.scribd.com/doc/130378156/2013-Spring-Sower#page=4
  29. ^ Rural Poverty in Tanzania. (2010). Rural Poverty Report. http://www.ruralpovertyportal.org/country/home/tags/tanzania
  30. ^ Mmasa, J. J. (2013). Policy Brief No. 8: Participation of Women in Agriculture in Tanzania: Challenges and Policy Recommendations. CLKnet. http://clknet.or.tz/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/WOMEN-PARTICIPATION-IN-AGRICULTURE-IN-TANZANIA_FV.pdf
  31. ^ a b Shimer, K. (2010). Tending to Eden Recognized for National Book Award. Judson Press. http://www.judsonpress.com/img/cms/press_releases/National%20Indie%20Excellence%20award.pdf
  32. ^ a b Wings of Kilimanjaro. (2013). http://wingsofkilimanjaro.com/index.php/home/

Further reading edit

  1. Sabin, S. (2010). Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for Gods People.
  2. Sabin, S. (2012). Getting to the Root of Poverty. Huffington Post: Impact. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-sabin/getting-to-the-root-of-poverty_b_2074403.html.
  3. Myers, B. L. (1999). Walking With the Poor: Principles and Practices of Transformational Development.

External links edit

  • Plant With Purpose's homepage

plant, with, purpose, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, clean. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Plant With Purpose formerly known as Floresta is a Christian nonprofit organization that works in developing countries around the world with the goal of improving the quality of the lives of people living in extreme rural poverty 1 Plant With Purpose uses a transformational development approach that brings together environmental restoration economic empowerment and spiritual renewal 2 Plant With Purpose currently works in more than 1 100 communities in eight countries across Africa the Caribbean Latin America and Southeast Asia 3 Plant With PurposeFounded1984TypeNon governmental organizationLocationSan Diego CaliforniaArea servedBurundiDominican RepublicDemocratic Republic of the CongoEthiopiaHaitiMexicoTanzaniaThailandKey peopleScott Sabin Executive Director Revenue 5 5MWebsitewww plantwithpurpose org Contents 1 History 1 1 Timeline 2 Rural poverty 3 Methodology 3 1 Environmental restoration 3 2 Economic empowerment 3 3 Spiritual renewal 4 International impact 4 1 Burundi 4 2 Democratic Republic of the Congo 4 3 Dominican Republic 4 4 Ethiopia 4 5 Haiti 4 6 Mexico 4 7 Tanzania 4 8 Thailand 5 Highlights 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editPlant With Purpose was founded in 1984 under the original name Floresta 4 Tom Woodard and his colleagues had travelled to the Dominican Republic to volunteer with an agency doing relief work According to Woodard food aid alone would not solve long term problems caused by deforestation and desperate farming practices that depleted the soil 5 He realized that farmers needed sustainable methods to meet their immediate needs while also working toward long term restoration of the land In response Woodard developed Floresta to meet the environmental economic and spiritual needs of rural communities in the Dominican Republic Today Plant With Purpose operates in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 6 the Dominican Republic Ethiopia Burundi Haiti Mexico Tanzania and Thailand 7 Timeline edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message 1984 Floresta Dominican Republic is founded 8 1997 Floresta Haiti is founded 1999 Mision Integral Floresta Mexico is founded 2004 Floresta Tanzania is founded 2006 Plant With Purpose first uses the Village Savings and Loan Association VSLA method 9 2008 Floresta and Upland Holistic Development Project UHDP form a partnership in the northern hills of Thailand 2008 Floresta Burundi becomes the sixth international program 2010 Floresta is renamed Plant With Purpose 2012 Plant With Purpose reaches 8 million trees planted worldwide 10 2015 Plant With Purpose launches program in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 2015 Plant With Purpose reaches 16 million trees planted worldwide 2018 Plant With Purpose launches program in Ethiopia 2021 Plant With Purpose reaches 40 million trees planted worldwide Rural poverty editToday more than 85 of the world s poorest people or roughly 1 4 billion people live in rural isolated areas limiting their access to basic resources 11 12 Most rural communities depend on the land for their livelihood and survival Members of these rural communities often have limited access to financial services like savings and credit and struggle to procure adequate resources This makes them extremely vulnerable to external shocks such as natural disasters family emergencies poor crop yields and civil unrest 11 Without an established safety net external shocks can cause rural families to fall deeper into a cycle of poverty When left with few options to generate needed income rural farmers often cut trees to create more farmland or to use or sell as fuelwood 13 This cycle of deforestation degrades soil damages habitats and biodiversity and further exacerbates the problems of rural poverty Methodology edit nbsp Three part environmental economic and spiritual approach to sustainable development Plant With Purpose employs a three part approach for transformational community development that addresses environmental restoration economic empowerment and spiritual renewal 14 15 The overarching strategy is to provide training and tools that equip rural communities to develop and utilize their own talents and resources to reverse the effects of poverty Environmental restoration edit Areas suffering from rural poverty often suffer from environmental degradation as well 11 Partnering communities receive agricultural training and plant trees to establish reforestation and sustainable farming techniques The small scale farmers within these communities can then work to restore the environment while simultaneously producing more income and crop yields Economic empowerment edit Plant With Purpose uses the Village Savings and Loan Associations VSLA model created by CARE to provide a sustainable form of microfinance that allows participants to build capital 16 This savings led approach equips self elected groups to create a financial safety net by saving their own money and making small loans to individuals within the group 17 The group decides on a fair interest rate which then go back to the group and increase overall savings Spiritual renewal edit Plant With Purpose partners with local churches to develop local leadership and support discipleship efforts Plant With Purpose also uses a formal program 18 designed to mobilize congregations to be agents of change in their communities by finding solutions to existing needs using local resources Spiritual programs also tie back into environmental restoration through connection to creation care While Plant With Purpose is a Christian organization that works with local churches and Christian leaders as a component of community interactions participation in its programs is not contingent on religious affiliation nor does it require participation in Bible studies or church services Plant With Purpose s Theology of Work curriculum in Burundi is also taught in local mosques and helps facilitate reconciliation in communities International impact editBurundi edit In 2008 Plant With Purpose began working in Burundi after the end of a long period of violent conflict 19 Burundi is one of the five poorest countries in the world and has been rated the hungriest country in the world 20 Democratic Republic of the Congo edit In July 2015 Plant With Purpose launched its seventh country program in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Serving over 6 500 families in 38 communities focuses on promoting prosperity and peace following the civil war Working in the areas of greatest environmental degradation in the Kakumba watershed which is located on the northwest edge of Lake Tanganyika These rapidly disappearing forests are home to the endangered Eastern Mountain Gorilla 6 Dominican Republic edit The Dominican Republic is the first country Plant With Purpose partnered with and has been the longest running program to date Of those living in rural Dominican areas 57 live below the poverty line 21 Ethiopia edit Plant with Purpose is serving over 800 families in 90 communities in Ethiopia focuses on protecting ancient church forests in the Amhara region Haiti edit Haiti is recognized as the poorest country in the western hemisphere and has one of the world s highest rates of deforestation 22 23 The country is still recovering following a magnitude 7 0 earthquake in 2010 Plant With Purpose has been working in rural Haitian communities since 1997 In rural areas 88 of Haitians are considered poor living on less than 2 a day and 67 are extremely poor living on less than 1 25 a day 24 Mexico edit Plant With Purpose has worked in Oaxaca Mexico with indigenous communities since 1996 and began working in the neighbouring state of Chiapas in 2012 Oaxaca and Chiapas are two of the three poorest states in Mexico 25 In Mexico 61 of rural families live below the poverty line while 75 of the indigenous population live in poverty 26 Nearly 25 of this population group mainly the men has migrated to the U S and other parts of Mexico leaving many women to provide for themselves and their children 27 Tanzania edit Plant With Purpose began working with communities in the Mt Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania in 2004 The majority of Tanzanian farmers who partner with Plant With Purpose are women 28 In Tanzania 98 of rural women who are economically active depend on the land for survival through agriculture 29 30 Thailand edit In 2008 Plant With Purpose began a partnership with an existing organization called the Upland Holistic Development Project UHDP The focus of the program is helping marginalized hill tribe communities in Thailand s northern hills The northern hill tribe communities of Thailand consist of hundreds of thousands of refugees The majority of ethnic hill tribes people came to Thailand to escape civil strife in Myanmar Burma Highlights editIn 2010 Plant With Purpose s Executive Director Scott Sabin published Tending to Eden Environmental Stewardship for God s People 2 31 Tending to Eden offers a global perspective on the theological foundation for caring for the earth and its people 31 In February 2013 an organization called Wings of Kilimanjaro organized a group of almost 100 para gliders to climb Mt Kilimanjaro and fly from the top 32 The group raised funds for three nonprofits working in Tanzania including Plant With Purpose 32 See also editTrees for the FutureReferences edit Mission 2012 Plant With Purpose http www plantwithpurpose org mission a b Sabin S 2010 Tending to Eden Environmental Stewardship for God s People Judson Press Valley Forge PA Plant With Purpose Global Villages 2014 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Unknown parameter agency ignored help History and Philosophy Plant With Purpose Agriculture and Rural Development Soil Degradation 2013 The World Bank http web worldbank org WBSITE EXTERNAL TOPICS EXTARD 0 contentMDK 20452551 pagePK 148956 piPK 216618 theSitePK 336682 00 html a b 2015 Fall Sower Scribd Retrieved 2015 11 17 Annual Report July 2011 June 2012 2012 Plant With Purpose San Diego CA Nonprofit Profile Floresta USA San Diego Business Journal 2006 10 22 Retrieved 2023 07 26 VSL Associates vsla net Retrieved 2015 11 18 Lee M 2012 Nonprofit Group Marks 8 Millionth Tree Planted UT San Diego News http www utsandiego com news 2012 sep 05 tp nonprofit group marks 8 millionth planted tree print amp page all a b c Rural Poverty Report 2011 2010 International Fund for Agriculture Development IFAD http www ifad org rpr2011 report e overview pdf Alkire Sabina Conconi Adriana Seth Suman Vaz Ana June 2014 Global Multidimensional Poverty Index 2014 PDF Oxford Poverty amp Human Development Initiative Environment and Natural Resource Management Paper 2002 International Fund for Agricultural Development IFAD http www ifad org pub enviorn EnvironENG pdf Alford D 2009 Trees of Life How Floresta integrates development discipleship and creation care overseas http www christianitytoday com ct 2009 november 32 54 html start 2 Sabin S 2012 Getting to the Root of Poverty Huffington Post Impact http www huffingtonpost com scott sabin getting to the root of poverty b 2074403 html VSLA Model 2012 VSL Associates http vsla net aboutus vslmodel Small Wonder A new model of microfinace for the very poor is spreading The Economist http www economist com node 21541429 UMOJA 2013 Tearfund International Learning Zone http tilz tearfund org Churches Umoja Burundi Profile 2012 BBC News Africa https www bbc co uk news world africa 13085064 Grebmer K V et al 2012 Global Hunger Index The Challenge of Hunger Ensuring Sustainable Food Security Under Land Water and Energy Stress International Food Policy Research Institute IFPRI http www ifpri org sites default files publications ghi12 pdf Dominican Republic Country Strategic Opportunities Programme 2010 International Fund for Agricultural Development IFAD http www ifad org gbdocs eb 99 e EB 2010 99 R 10 pdf The World Factbook Haiti 2013 The Central Intelligence Agency https www cia gov the world factbook countries haiti McDermott M 2009 10 Countries With the Highest Deforestation Rates in the World Tree Hugger http www treehugger com corporate responsibility 10 countries with the highest deforestation rates in the world html Rural Poverty in Haiti 2012 Rural Poverty Portal http www ruralpovertyportal org country home tags haiti Mexico Poverty at a Glance Fact Sheet 2010 U S Embassy Mexico City https photos state gov libraries mexico 895 pdf 2010 Poverty Fact Sheet pdf Enabling Poor Rural People to Overcome Poverty in Mexico 2012 International Fund for Agricultural Development http www ifad org operations projects regions pl factsheet mexico e pdf Measuring the Impact of ICF supported Productive Employment Projects in Oaxaca 2011 International Community Foundation Huizenga C amp Luthye B 2013 The Sower Female Farming Plant With Purpose https www scribd com doc 130378156 2013 Spring Sower page 4 Rural Poverty in Tanzania 2010 Rural Poverty Report http www ruralpovertyportal org country home tags tanzania Mmasa J J 2013 Policy Brief No 8 Participation of Women in Agriculture in Tanzania Challenges and Policy Recommendations CLKnet http clknet or tz wp content uploads 2013 03 WOMEN PARTICIPATION IN AGRICULTURE IN TANZANIA FV pdf a b Shimer K 2010 Tending to Eden Recognized for National Book Award Judson Press http www judsonpress com img cms press releases National 20Indie 20Excellence 20award pdf a b Wings of Kilimanjaro 2013 http wingsofkilimanjaro com index php home Further reading editSabin S 2010 Tending to Eden Environmental Stewardship for Gods People Sabin S 2012 Getting to the Root of Poverty Huffington Post Impact http www huffingtonpost com scott sabin getting to the root of poverty b 2074403 html Myers B L 1999 Walking With the Poor Principles and Practices of Transformational Development External links editPlant With Purpose s homepage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plant with Purpose amp oldid 1207555279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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