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Location:

The QED Group
1250 Eye Street, NW
Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20005
United States

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Feed the Future Stakeholder Meeting
Presenter(s):

Nancy Lindborg
USAID Bureau for Democracy Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance

Greg Gottlieb
USAID Bureau for Food Security

Jeff Hill
USAID Bureau for Food Security

Susan Fine
USAID Bureau for Africa

Tom Beck
USAID Bureau of Policy Planning and Learning

Date:
May 10, 2012 - 9:00am - 10:30am

Presenter Bio(s):

Nancy Lindborg
USAID Bureau for Democracy Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance

Headshot of Nancy LindborgAssistant Administrator Nancy Lindborg brings a wealth of development and humanitarian aid insight to the Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance (DCHA). Nancy has spent the last 14 years as president of Mercy Corps, a non-governmental organization (NGO) that helps people in the world’s toughest places turn the crises of natural disaster, poverty, and conflict into opportunities for progress. Under her guidance and strategic vision, Mercy Corps has grown into a respected international relief and development organization and is known for addressing challenges with responsive, innovative programming. Nancy also served as co-president on the Board of Directors for the U.S. Global Leadership Campaign. She was co-chair of the National Committee on North Korea where she led efforts to advance, promote, and facilitate engagement between citizens of the United States and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and was a member of the USAID Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid.

From 2000 to 2005, she was chair of the Sphere Management Committee, an international initiative to improve the effectiveness and accountability of NGOs. From 1998 to 2002, Lindborg was the co-chair of the InterAction Disaster Response Committee—InterAction is the largest alliance of U.S.-based international NGOs focused on the world's poor and most vulnerable people. Before joining Mercy Corps in 1996, she managed economic development programs as a regional director in post-Soviet Central Asia and worked in the private sector as a public policy consultant in Chicago and San Francisco. She holds a B.A and M.A. in English Literature from Stanford University and an M.A. in Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

Greg Gottlieb
USAID Bureau for Food Security

Photo of Greg GottliebGregory C. Gottlieb was named Senior Deputy Assistant Administrator for the USAID Bureau for Food Security in November 2010, where he oversees development activities associated with Feed the Future, the U.S. Government’s global hunger and food security initiative. He most recently served as the Mission Director in Namibia since August 2008. Prior to his assignment to Namibia, he served as Senior Deputy Assistant Administrator of USAID's Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance. He has more than 25 years of experience with the U.S. government, NGOs, and the UN, primarily in the field of humanitarian relief. He began his USAID career in 1988 as the Disaster Response Coordinator in Malawi, subsequently serving in Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya. In 1999 he established the first regional USAID Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance in Africa while serving as the Senior Regional Advisor in Kenya. Much of his work has focused on improving disaster assistance as well as humanitarian and transition programs in order to ensure economic recovery. He has also served as a protection officer for UNHCR and as Chief of Party of the USAID-funded Famine Early Warning System. He obtained his Bachelors' Degree from Humboldt State University in California, a Juris Doctor from Loyola Law School, and a Master's Degree from Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government. He is married and has two children.

Jeff Hill
USAID Bureau for Food Security

Headshot of Jeff HillJeff Hill has many years of experience in African agricultural development and currently serves in USAID's recently created Bureau for Food Security (BFS). He started his career as a Peace Corps volunteer in Sierra Leone and later served as Associate Peace Corps Director in that country. Prior to USAID, he worked for the World Bank for 10 years in Tanzania and Nigeria. At USAID he has been a team leader for a number of agriculture and food security initiatives for the Africa Bureau and now for BFS. He presently works on Feed the Future initiatives, and prior to that worked on many programs that promoted agricultural growth and built on African-led partnerships to cut hunger and poverty. He has designed, led, and managed a variety of teams on research, private sector development, trade, capacity building and policy. He currently chairs the Donor Development Partners CAADP group and process -- a group of 32 donors worldwide dedicated to African agricultural development. He holds a BS from Weber State University in Utah in public administration and an MS from UC Davis in agricultural economics and agronomy.

Susan Fine
USAID Bureau for Africa

Susan Fine is the Director of the Office of East African Affairs in USAID’s Africa Bureau where she oversees programs in the Horn of Africa and the Great Lakes countries. A Senior Foreign Service officer, she has extensive experience planning and managing international development programs. She was most recently the Deputy Mission Director responsible for southern Sudan during southern Sudan’s historic self-determination referendum and subsequent transition to independence. Prior to that, she guided program policy in USAID’s Office of the Chief Operating Officer and served as Director of Strategic Planning and Operations in the Bureau for Asia and the Middle East. She began her USAID career in Swaziland and subsequently served in Uganda, South Africa and Senegal. She holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Colby College and a master’s degree in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard.

Tom Beck
USAID Bureau of Policy Planning and Learning

Headshot of Tom BeckThomas Beck is Senior Advisor in the Policy Office of the Policy, Planning and Learning Bureau (PPL) of USAID. He advises the Agency on resilience and food security issues. He has extensive experience in the areas of international organizations, conflict prevention and post conflict reconstruction. He was co-leader of a small USAID team which had lead responsibility for drafting the U.S. Strategy for Meeting the Millennium Development Goals which the President presented at the 2010 MDG Summit. Recently, he served as Senior Advisor to USAID’s Bureau for Food Security and the Office of the Deputy Coordinator for the Presidential initiative, Feed the Future.

He served at USAID previously during the Clinton administration as Senior Advisor for Conflict Prevention and Peace Building, where he was a leader in introducing conflict prevention into the international development agenda. He also served USAID as Senior Advisor for UN Affairs, where he represented the Agency before a variety of UN bodies and assisted in the reform of the UN’s humanitarian functions. He has served as a consultant on international organizations and conflict and peace building issues. As an attorney, he practiced many years in Alaska where he represented Alaska Native corporations and non-profit organizations. He is a graduate of Case Western Reserve University Law School and holds an LLM in international law from the London School of Economics and Political Science

March 28 Ag Sector Council Seminar: The complex web of knowledge sharing for food security and agriculture

On March 28, 2012, Agrilinks hosted an Agriculture Sector Council seminar on FILED UNDER: blog, General Blog, USAID Bureau for Food Security, Blog entry, Knowledge & Learning

Ibrahim Shaqir makes the case for public sector agricultural research at February 29 Ag Sector Council Seminar

Although production inputs such as seeds and fertilizer sometimes hog the spotlight, public sector agricultural research is also a vital input for sustained agricultural productivity. At the FILED UNDER: blog, General Blog, USAID Bureau for Food Security, Ag Sector Council Seminar, Blog entry, Government, Brazil, Capacity Building, Sub-Saharan Africa, Production Inputs, Research, Latin America and Carribean

Location:

Ronald Reagan Building
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Room M17/18 (Public Information Center)
Washington, DC 20004
United States

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Ag Sector Council Seminar
Presenter(s):

Ibrahim Shaqir
USDA / ARS

Date:
February 29, 2012 - 9:30am - 10:30am

Presenter Bio(s):

Ibrahim Shaqir
USDA / ARS

Headshot of Ibrahim ShaqirMr. Shaqir is the Director of the Office of International Research Programs (OIRP) within the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) of the U.S Department of Agriculture (USDA). From 2001-2008, he was a Senior International Affairs Specialist in OIRP, with primary responsibility for ARS international activities serving as the staff arm of the ARS Associate Administrator for National Programs for planning and managing international aspects of ARS National Programs. Prior to that, Mr. Shaqir served as an International Affairs Specialist with responsibility for ARS international activities in the Middle East and North Africa. This included coordinating ARS programs in North Africa and Middle East and serving as a liaison with the U.S.-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD). In the summer of 2007, Mr. Shaqir was selected as a Department of State Embassy Science Fellow where he served as the Acting Environment, Science, Technology and Health (ESTH) Officer for the U.S. Embassy, Tel Aviv. Prior to coming to ARS, he worked at the University of Maryland College Park, and as a consultant with the Research and Scientific Exchanges Division of the USDA-Foreign Agricultural Service, managing cooperative multilateral projects in the Middle East in a variety of agricultural research areas. He received his B.S. degree from Rutgers University and his Master's from the University of Maryland. Mr. Shaqir is also a graduate of the 2011 Harvard Kennedy School Senior Executive Fellows Program. He is fluent in Arabic and Hebrew.

A Year of Agriculture Sector Council Seminars - 2011

FILED UNDER: blog, General Blog, USAID Bureau for Food Security, Ag Sector Council Seminar, Blog entry, Agriculture, Biotechnology, Technology

Location:

Ronald Reagan Building
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Room M17/18 (Public Information Center)
Washington, DC 20004
United States

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Presenter(s):

Ian Gregory
IFDC

David Rohrbach
World Bank (Tanzania)

Date:
January 25, 2012 - 9:30am - 10:30am

Reducing global poverty and hunger requires accelerating growth in the agriculture sector through improvements in sustainable productivity. Smallholder farmers have the potential to increase productivity through the application of technology and knowledge, and through participation in input and output markets. Constrained by lack of resources, aversion to risk, and access to markets, smallholder farmers can benefit from assistance directed to their needs.

Presenter Bio(s):

Ian Gregory
IFDC

Photo of Ian GregoryIan Gregory is an agribusiness market development specialist with 40 years experience in agro-inputs marketing. His current responsibilities are to provide assistance on project design and implementation and agribusiness technical assistance to the IFDC EurAsia Division Program. He managed IFDC’s agribusiness development projects for ten years, and from 2002 to 2005 served as director of the Market Development Division. He has been extensively involved in designing, implementing and monitoring agro-input voucher programs in Eurasia and sub-Saharan Africa. Since joining IFDC, he has provided technical assistance and training in agri-input marketing, financial analysis, pre-feasibility studies and policy development and implementation in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Central Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Russia. He has authored or co-authored more than 35 publications and technical reports on agri-input marketing systems, marketing and project pre-feasibility in developing countries. He prepared an extensive range of training materials for IFDC. Prior to joining IFDC, he served as a corporate business analyst with Incitec Ltd. in Australia for 19 years. He was previously a farm extension advisor in the United Kingdom and Australia. He was awarded a B.S. in agricultural science and agricultural economics and an M.S. in crop husbandry from University of Wales, United Kingdom.

David Rohrbach
World Bank (Tanzania)

Photo of David RohrbachDr. David Rohrbach is a Senior Agricultural Economist for the World Bank, currently based in Dar es Salaam. During the past five years he has managed components of the Bank’s agricultural portfolio in Tanzania, Malawi and Zimbabwe. This includes support for fertilizer voucher programmes in all three countries. Prior to joining the Bank in 2006, he worked in various institutes of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) including CIMMYT (1983), IFPRI (1988-94) and ICRISAT (1988-2006). He has resided and worked in southern Africa for the past 26 years – mostly on issues of agricultural technology change, crop improvement, market development and commodity risk management.

Location:

Ronald Reagan Building
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Room M17/18 (Public Information Center)
Washington, DC 20004
United States

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Ag Sector Council Meeting
Presenter(s):

Dan Gudahl
Winrock International

Date:
November 30, 2011 - 9:30am - 10:30am

The Rural Enterprise for Alleviating Poverty (REAP) project was a 30-month program, implemented by Winrock International and funded by USDA, that worked in the Mymensingh, Gazipur, and Tangail Districts of rural Bangladesh. REAP improved the socio-economic and nutritional status of poor and marginal farmers by providing seed and technical assistance to increase horticulture and freshwater pond production while linking farmers to coordinated production and marketing opportunities.

Presenter Bio(s):

Dan Gudahl
Winrock International

Photo of Dan Gudahl.Dan Gudahl is a Senior Program Officer at Winrock International. Based in Little Rock, Arkansas, he currently manages a pipeline of project funding of over $32 million. This includes a USDA Food for Progress program in Pakistan that assists farmers in Balochistan province with improving field-to-market capacity; a USAID-funded rehabilitation program in six Districts of Northern Uganda that assists local governments to manage construction based projects funded by the U.S. Government; and several rural development projects in Bangladesh including a 2011 funded USDA Food for Progress follow-on project for the Rural Enterprise to Alleviate Poverty (REAP) project. Gudahl previously served as Director of Contracts for Winrock International. From 1992-2000, he was the Africa director for Heifer International. Gudahl holds a master’s degree in International Agriculture from California Polytechnic, San Luis Obispo, California and was a Peace Corps Volunteer who taught animal science at an agricultural college in the Philippines. He is married and has one daughter who is currently a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic.

Location:
International Food Policy Research Institute
Conference Room 4AB, 4th floor (Entrance on 21st Street)
2033 K St., NW
Washington, DC United States
Date:
Registration Deadline:October 10, 2011
Delivery Method:In-Person
Event Host:USAID Bureau for Food Security / USAID BASIS CRSP Project

Please RSVP to Betsy Pereira by Monday, October 10th. Space is limited.

Location:

Ronald Reagan Building
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Room M17/18 (Public Information Center)
Washington, DC 20004
United States

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Ag Sector Council Meeting
Presenter(s):

Tim Williams
Peanut Collaborative Research Support Program

Date:
October 19, 2011 - 9:30am - 10:30am

The Peanut Collaborative Research Support Program (Peanut CRSP or PCRSP) supports joint research, technology development, and capacity development in eleven African and Latin American countries to boost productivity of peanut crops and increase the economic advancement of small-scale farmers. The Program has 21 active projects with diverse research themes. Presently, Peanut CRSP is paying special attention to the management, prevention, and consequences of aflatoxin.

Presenter Bio(s):

Tim Williams
Peanut Collaborative Research Support Program

Photo of Tim Williams.For 40 years, Tim Williams has strived to achieve public health and development goals through research on peanut science and the peanut value chain. In 1980, he joined the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid-Tropics (ICRISAT) in India to lead peanut research on drought, plant nutrition, yield potential, and genotype/environment interactions. After 9 years in India, he spent 6 years at the ICRISAT Sahelian Center in Niger researching peanut, cowpea, and millet cropping systems.

Tim joined the University of Georgia and Peanut Collaborative Research Support Program (Peanut CRSP) in 1995 and became Director in 1997. He has focused on streamlining research management and on the market and utilization aspects of the peanut industry. His current professional interests span the entire peanut sector and opportunities to involve agriculture in the realization of health. He has developed a strong interest in mycotoxins, particularly in the prevention and chronic health effects of human aflatoxicosis. His research has established that aflatoxin is immuno-suppressive and is exacerbating the HIV epidemic, vitamin deficiencies, and malaria in Africa. Under Tim’s leadership, Peanut CRSP has become a world leader in documenting human exposure to and the public health consequences of aflatoxin.

Tim received his Doctor of Philosophy in Crop Science from the University of Rhodesia/Zimbabwe in 1979. He has authored over 130 publications in scientific journals and as book chapters. He is responsible for numerous inventions placed in the public domain, including a soil moisture probe that he co-invented in 1985. This device was selected by NASA for the most recent Mars probe to confirm the existence of water on that planet.