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Who we are

With research staff from more than 70 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Lilia Bliznashka

Lily Bliznashka is a Research Fellow in the Nutrition, Diets, and Health Unit. Her research focuses on assessing the effectiveness of multi-input nutrition-sensitive and nutrition-specific interventions and the mechanisms through which they work to improve maternal and child health and nutrition globally. She has worked in Burkina Faso, Burundi, Tanzania, and Uganda.

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What we do

Since 1975, IFPRI’s research has been informing policies and development programs to improve food security, nutrition, and livelihoods around the world.

Where we work

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Where we work

IFPRI currently has more than 480 employees working in over 70 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.



  • Agricultural Insurance: Innovations, Policies, and Pathways to Scale

    Farm households face numerous risks that can discourage investments and trap them in poverty. Insurance should be a useful tool to reduce these hazards, but agricultural risks are inherently difficult to insure against. Willingness and capacity to pay insurance premiums also range widely. The lack of adequate agricultural insurance is a major concern for governments,…

  • Navigating Risk: Challenges in Agricultural Commodity Shipping and Insurance Markets

    Shipping is at the heart of global agricultural trade, with more than 80 percent of staple crops and oilseeds moving by sea, yet maritime routes have become increasingly uncertain. Attacks on vessels in strategic corridors, drought‑restricted passages, and sharply rising war‑risk insurance premiums have created levels of exposure not seen in years. Bulk agricultural cargoes…

  • Advancing Poverty Graduation in Fragile Contexts: A New Agenda for Research and Policy

    Multifaceted livelihoods interventions that target households in extreme poverty are extremely effective in reducing extreme poverty, with consistent gains in income, consumption, savings, and psychosocial well-being. These interventions, often called graduation models, have been widely evaluated, but most evidence comes from stable rural settings. In fragile and conflict-affected environments where poverty is increasingly concentrated, household-level…


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Journal Article

Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers

2026Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; Sun, Rui; Zhao, Yuanyuan; Li, Xunhuan; Zhang, Dawei; Meng, Ran
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Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers

Year published

2026

Authors

Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; Sun, Rui; Zhao, Yuanyuan; Li, Xunhuan; Zhang, Dawei; Meng, Ran

Citation

Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; et al. 2026. Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers. Global Environmental Change 98(July 2026): 103140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2026.103140

Country/Region

China

Keywords

Asia; Eastern Asia; Climate Change; Vulnerability; Poverty Alleviation; Rural Development; Climate Resilience; Spatial Data; Climate-smart Agriculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya

2026Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; Handa, Sudhanshu
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Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya

The use of migration as an adaptation strategy is now recognized by scholars and policymakers as a key response to climate change. Cash transfer programs, now being implemented worldwide, also have the potential to facilitate adaptation and promote resilience in low- and middle-income countries. We investigate the extent to which a cash transfer program in Kenya promoted the mobility of household members due to climate shocks, leveraging exogenous variation in local deviations from the historical climate and the administration of the program through a randomized controlled trial. Our findings indicate that beneficiary households were less likely to reduce migration amid cold spells, likely via shifts in education-related migration. We also find that heat spells ubiquitously encourage new members to join the household, while cold spells have the opposite effect, and that cash transfers do not appear to alter these relationships. Together the results suggest that cold spells can trap migrants in temperate, low-resource settings and that cash transfers can partially alleviate these constraints. Modeling migration and complementary strategies in the presence of climate tipping points will become necessary to predict when more permanent migration will be triggered and modifying social assistance will become necessary.

Year published

2026

Authors

Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; Handa, Sudhanshu

Citation

Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; and Handa, Sudhanshu. 2026. Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya. Population and Environment 48(2): 9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11111-025-00515-5

Country/Region

Kenya

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Cash Transfers; Social Protection; Climate Change; Migration; Climate Migration

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Leveraging social protection to strengthen women’s and girls’ climate-resilience in agrifood systems

2026Hidrobo, Melissa; Mueller, Valerie; Roy, Shalini; Bryan, Elizabeth; Nesbitt-Ahmed, Zahrah; Läderach, Peter
Details

Leveraging social protection to strengthen women’s and girls’ climate-resilience in agrifood systems

Women and girls (WGs) have important roles in making agrifood systems more climate resilient. However, systemic inequalities in access to resources, technologies, information, services, and networks, alongside limited agency and restrictive gender norms, reduce their capacity to adapt to and mitigate climate change. WGs’ constraints on adaptation bear implications on the wellbeing of WGs, their households, and the sustainability of agrifood systems. With growing recognition that social protection helps promote WGs’ resilience in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) at large scale, stakeholders are interested in developing social protection programs that are responsive to both climate change and gender inequality. However, little is known about effective approaches. We develop a conceptual framework on how social assistance – the most prevalent type of social protection programming in many LMICs – affects WGs’ coping, adaptive, and mitigative responses to climate hazards. We reflect on the emerging evidence and propose recommendations on program design features that may more effectively promote WGs’ climate resilience in agrifood systems. We additionally highlight important directions for future research to guide practice.

Year published

2026

Authors

Hidrobo, Melissa; Mueller, Valerie; Roy, Shalini; Bryan, Elizabeth; Nesbitt-Ahmed, Zahrah; Läderach, Peter

Citation

Hidrobo, Melissa; Mueller, Valerie; Roy, Shalini; Bryan, Elizabeth; Nesbitt-Ahmed, Zahrah; and Läderach, Peter. 2026. Leveraging social protection to strengthen women’s and girls’ climate-resilience in agrifood systems. Food Policy 140(May 2026): 103066. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103066

Keywords

Social Protection; Gender; Climate Resilience; Agrifood Systems; Gender Equality; Developing Countries

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Fragility, Conflict, and Migration

Record type

Journal Article

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