Plataforma de conocimientos sobre agricultura familiar

Recursos

La sección titulada “Recursos” contiene publicaciones y materiales multimedia archivados que guardan relación con cuestiones generales en el ámbito de la agricultura familiar.

Las referencias externas de esta página se proporcionan únicamente con fines informativos; no constituyen un respaldo ni una aprobación de la FAO.

Búsqueda en la base de datos

Texto libre
Más opciones de búsqueda
Año
País
Regiones geo/econ.
Tema principal
Tema secundario

Artículo de blog
Bio management of coconut pests – Social process for mass adoption

Coconut is the crop of small and marginal farmers which is grown contiguously on their land holdings. Crop management is largely dependent on farmer to farmer extension as conventional extension system seldom looked into the contextual needs, need based delivery mechanisms for improving the efficacy of management in farmers gardens. Black...
India
2021 - Leisa India

Vídeo
Scaling Up Agroecology in the Himalayas Together - Day 1

Last 28 & 29 April, 2021 , high-level policy experts gathered at the digital event “Scaling up Agroecology in the Himalayas Together” to discuss and inspire key decision-makers on policies supporting agroecology and organic agriculture in the region. The Himalayas event was organised by IFOAM – Organics International and the...
Bhutan - India - Nepal
2021 - IFOAM – Organics International and the World Future Council

Vídeo
Scaling Up Agroecology in the Himalayas Together - Day 2

Last 28 & 29 April, 2021, high-level policy experts gathered at the digital event “Scaling up Agroecology in the Himalayas Together” to discuss and inspire key decision-makers on policies supporting agroecology and organic agriculture in the region. The Himalayas event was organised by IFOAM – Organics International and the World...
Bhutan - India - Nepal
2021 - IFOAM – Organics International and the World Future Council

Artículo de blog
Himachal farmer revives ancient crop system that saves water and has zero input costs

Nekram Sharma, a farmer from Karsog valley of Himachal Pradesh’s Mandi district, India revives along with its community an ancient indigenous farming technique. Nau-Anaj (‘nau’ means nine and ‘anaj’ is crop) is an intercropping or mixed farming method to grow nine foodgrains on the same piece of land. These crops are...
India
2021

Vídeo
India's natural farming revolution

In the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, India water scarcity and poor soil quality forced many farmers to walk away from agriculture. But a few years ago, the state of Andhra Pradesh launched an ambitious program called Andhra Pradesh Community managed Natural Farming (APCNF)  that is transforming the farming practices to stop the...
India
2021 - France 24

Artículo de blog
Entrepreneurship to promote organic farming

It is a well-known fact that the use of organic or biological inputs has assumed importance in the promotion of organic agriculture.  In conventional agriculture where the application of chemical inputs is widely known for its direct action to feed and protect the crop,on the contrary, in organic agriculture, inputs...
India
2021 - Leisa India

Artículo de blog
Himachal’s women farmers expand their horizons, without hurting the nature

Women farmers in the hill State of Himachal Pradesh are gradually turning to non-chemical, low cost “natural farming”, which has not only provided them with a sustainable livelihood but also empowered them better. Launched in 2018, the State’s Prakritik Kheti Khushhal Yojana is promoting the climate resilient Subhash Palekar Natural Farming...
India
2021 - The Hindu

Vídeo
Wicked Sprint on Scaling Natural Farming in India - A vision for 2035,

A collective vision of scaling Natural Farming in India and beyond that emerged from the workshop organized by RySS and ATECF. The workshop was attended by leaders from multiple organizations keen to scale up Natural Farming in India and beyond. The process enabled a rich evocation of the imaginations and...
India
2021 - Socratus Space

Vídeo
Turning fish waste into fertiliser

The guts, heads, skin or any other part of the fish that people do not eat can be turned into organic fertiliser by fermenting or composting it. Fish waste is rich in nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium and vitamins. By applying fish fertiliser, we can increase the good microbes in the soil,...
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Vídeo
Managing the rice leaf folder

By combining different organic methods, you will harvest a lot more rice and make more money.
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Vídeo
Calcium deficiency in dairy cows

Calcium deficiency is common among high-yielding dairy cows. A calcium deficient cow does not eat much, is cold to touch, looks tired and is unable to stand up. She gives less milk. Untreated cows may die. To prevent calcium deficiency, do not dehorn your cows. Let the cows have some...
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Artículo de revista especializada
India / Social Development: Looking at the Long Term

A survey of fisherfolk in the Indian state of West Bengal shows that relief measures for natural disasters and the COVID-19 pandemic must take into account long-standing vulnerabilities. The two most important concepts to set the agenda for the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 (SDGs) are ‘social development’ and ‘sustainable management’. The...
India
2021 - The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF)

Vídeo
Sprouting grains for livestock feed

When grains are soaked in water for a while and left to germinate, they will put out shoots or sprouts. By absorbing water sprouted seed more than double their weight. Sprouts are easier to digest than grains, because sprouting converts nearly all of the starch in the grains into sugar....
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Artículo de revista especializada
India / Social Development: Hand in Hand

Though Kerala and Tamil Nadu are top performers on the Human Development Index, their advances in sustainability and social development do not reach small-scale fishers. Social development of fishing communities can be made possible only through policies and services for poverty eradication, employment generation and social inclusion that address the specific...
India
2021 - The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF)

Vídeo
Managing false smut of rice

By applying a range of agroecological practices, you can avoid disease infestation in  your rice crop.
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Vídeo
Pitcher irrigation

With pitcher irrigation, round porous clay pots are buried into the soil near the crop and filled with water. The water seeps out slowly through the porous walls of the pot and reaches the roots of the plants. As the plants consume the water, more water will seep out from...
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Vídeo
The Silent Wave | A fisheries cooperative in India responds to Covid-19

On 21 March 2020, ten days after the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Covid-19 a pandemic, a voluntary closure was imposed on all fishing and fish marketing activities in Kollam in the southern Indian state of Kerala. Shot during the peak of the first wave of Covid-19 in India, this...
India
2021 - ICSF

Prácticas
Treating mastitis in cows, with low-cost and climate resilient, herbal regimen

Mastitis is an inflammation of one or more quarters of the udder (dairy herds) usually caused by bacterial infection. Several types of bacteria cause distinctly different mastitis infections. As a consequence, the udder is inflamed, swollen, and blood may come out with milk which yields to reduction in milk yields....
India
2021 - The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO TECA

Vídeo
Managing rust diseases in wheat and barley

Rust diseases spread through wind and can rapidly develop in cool, wet weather. To know if your crop has rust disease, rub over the infected plant part to see if a yellow, brown or black powder sticks to your fingers. By combining organic methods, you will be able to grow...
India
2021 - Access Agriculture

Prácticas
Treating anoestrus cases in cattle and small ruminants

Livestock including cows, sheep and goats do not come to heat due to lack of hormones and proper nutrition. Inductions of heat by chemical hormone is costly, and their residues can be seen in milk and meat, which can be hazardous. Livestock can be induced to heat by phytohormones. There...
India
2021 - The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO TECA
Total results:512