Policy

“The future we want: what older persons are saying”. The Situation in Cameroon

Fosso Yimga, Policy Intern Article published online at http://bit.ly/19zMwMw Selon la Constitution du Cameroun, la protection sociale des personnes âgées est une exigence de solidarité nationale : « la nation protège les femmes, les jeunes, les personnes handicapées et les personnes âgées ». Par ailleurs, les dispositions du code civil et pénal (article 180) et des avant-projets de code des personnes et de la famille, visent à contraindre les enfants défaillants à s’occuper de leurs parents âgés. En outre, il est aussi important de noter que le droit social camerounais comporte un ensemble de textes organisant la protection sociale [...]

By Foretia Foundation|October 9th, 2013|Categories: General, Health, Policy|Comments Off on “The future we want: what older persons are saying”. The Situation in Cameroon

Transforming Africa Through Leadership

Recently, I met two young men who will contribute greatly to the healing of those in their countries who have suffered unspeakable injustices. Paul Kut Kelei’s family was forced to flee South S?udan and he grew up as a refugee in Ethiopia. When he was a child, Joseph Munyambanza escaped civil war in the Congo and spent his formative years in the Kyangwali refugee camp in Uganda. Today Joseph is 23, Paul is 22 and they are studying biochemistry and international affairs respectively in the United States. At The MasterCard Foundation, we work with extraordinary young people from across Africa [...]

By Foretia Foundation|September 27th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|Comments Off on Transforming Africa Through Leadership

Human Rights and Democracy in Africa: What Role for the Arts?

By Mike Van Graan In the past 10 to 15 years, a number of African countries have seen sustained and high economic growth, yet this has not lifted the continent’s inhabitants out of poverty. While poverty has been massively reduced in Asia in the past 30 years—in China and India in particular—50 percent of Africans in 2013 still eke out an existence below the poverty line of $2 per day, just as they did in 1981. Of the 46 countries in the Low Human Development category of the Human Development Index (HDI), which measures health, education, and living standards, 36 [...]

By Foretia Foundation|September 24th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|Comments Off on Human Rights and Democracy in Africa: What Role for the Arts?

What Africa Needs to Succeed

By Isobel Coleman In the early 2000s, Africa’s future seemed grim. The Economist’s May 13, 2000 cover declared “Africa: The Hopeless Continent.” But over a decade later, when The Economist again devoted a feature story to the continent, the message had changed entirely to “Africa Rising.” A new book by Jonathan Berman, Success in Africa: CEO Insights from a Continent on the Rise, aims to explain how this transformation happened and what the world can expect from a now-hopeful continent. Berman argues that three simultaneous revolutions – in governance, education, and communications – have catapulted the region forward. Indeed, for [...]

By Foretia Foundation|September 22nd, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|Comments Off on What Africa Needs to Succeed

Four Lessons Cameroon can learn from China’s Experience

By Lenora Ebule Foretia [dropcap type="circle" color="#8C212A" background="#B06606"]C[/dropcap] hina’s impressive growth represents one of the greatest economic success stories of the last three decades. Since it adopted an “open market” policy in 1978, the country has grown at a remarkable speed and enjoyed an average GDP growth of 10.3% in the last decade. It has also succeeded in lifting more than 400million of its citizens out of poverty, more that any country in modern history. While China’s GDP grew by almost 380% between 1980 to the late 2000s, Cameroon’s GDP shrunk by about 10% in the same period. On a [...]

By Foretia Foundation|August 31st, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|6 Comments

Malnutrition – Agony Alongside Abundance in Cameroon

Under Five (5) Mortality in Cameroon Garoua — Despite fertile lands, malnourishment is rife in the north of Cameroon. Political prioritization and investment are crucial and urgent. Cameroon, with its abundant rainfall and fertile lands, is widely renowned for its enormous agricultural potential. But at the same time, 33% of children under the age of five in Cameroon suffer from malnutrition, and 14% from extreme malnutrition. This deteriorating and protracted crisis has placed Cameroon in the lower echelons of global malnutrition lists for several years, alongside far less resource-rich nations such as Chad and Niger. "Cameroon has been in the [...]

By Foretia Foundation|August 7th, 2013|Categories: General, Health, Policy|Tags: |1 Comment

Farming could be key to solving youth unemployment in Africa

By Karen Brooks Sub-Saharan Africa has the world's youngest and fastest growing population. With enough support from African leaders, agricultural initiatives will boost employment and the economy. Agriculture employs most of Africa's young people and is likely to continue to do so in the future. But to meet the aspirations of millions who want rewarding work, the continents's agricultural sector will have to change markedly. Today's farming by machete and hand hoe does not appeal to young Africans or to policymakers. Farming is not even viewed as a "job" by many young Africans, who instead reserve the term for employment [...]

By Foretia Foundation|June 6th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|2 Comments

Achieving Inclusive Growth in Africa

By Paul Frimpong Although Africa is experiencing a tremendous growth rate and rated as the fastest growing continent in the world. A new economic growth momentum has been established. But what does this mean to the very people on the continent? What actually are the strengths and the patterns of growth on the continent of Africa? Africa has recorded high rates of economic growth over the past decades; this growth has not been inclusive and has tended to exacerbate income inequalities. This growth has also been largely jobless and therefore associated with increasing unemployment especially among African youth. In addition, [...]

By Foretia Foundation|April 16th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy|Tags: |2 Comments

Africa: Supporting Women in Agriculture for a ‘Prosperous’ Africa

The African Union (AU) is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, but instead of looking back, the current chair, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, seems intent on casting her vision ahead to an Africa 50 years from now. Her hope is that it will be "a prosperous Africa at peace with itself". Dlamini-Zuma admits that this will not be easy, and she sees human and agricultural development as critical to the realisation of the Africa she envisions. "Agriculture is very central not only in providing nutrition, food and food security but also in stimulating industrialisation," said Dlamini-Zuma, speaking last week at the bi-annual [...]

By Foretia Foundation|February 11th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy, Programs|Tags: , , |2 Comments

Cameroon: Let Them Eat Local Rice

By Adam Sneyd As corn, soybean and wheat prices have surged over the past two months, many commodity watchers noted that rice prices were not trending higher. The latest projections reported in the Wall Street Journal, however, indicate that Asian rice will be subjected to considerable upward price pressure in the coming months. This is a worrying development for Cameroon and other African countries that depend on rice imports to meet their basic food needs. If Cameroon’s rice import bill does balloon later this year, the country’s households that are vulnerable to food insecurity — nearly one in three according [...]

By Foretia Foundation|January 24th, 2013|Categories: General, Policy, Science|Tags: , |Comments Off on Cameroon: Let Them Eat Local Rice
Go to Top