CNFA
Cultivating New Frontiers in Agriculture (CNFA) is a non-profit international development organization based in Washington, DC.[1] CNFA's mission is to increase and sustain rural incomes in less developed areas of the world by assisting farmers and rural entrepreneurs.[2] CNFA works in Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, South and Central Asia, Africa, the Near and Middle East and the Caribbean to improve agricultural economies by:[1][3]
- Strengthening market linkages
- Building input supply networks
- Promoting enterprise growth and development
- Enabling agribusiness financing
- Improving processing and marketing
CNFA receives funding from a variety of donors, including USAID, USDA, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, and the Rockefeller Foundation.[4]
History
CNFA was founded in 1985 as the Citizens Network for Foreign Affairs.[1]
The Citizens Network's National Policy Roundtable Programs was focused on expanding grassroots dialogue on the U.S. stake in global economic growth to include women, minorities, farmers, agribusinesses and small- and medium- size companies.[5]
In 1993, CNFA began the Food Systems Restructuring Program, using USAID funds to bring about agricultural reform in the NIS (Post-Soviet states), and sent out its first international volunteers to Russia and the Ukraine.[5]
Having shifted its focus from fostering dialogue to using public funds to promote international development, the Citizens Network for Foreign Affairs legally changed its name to CNFA in September 2007.[6]
Current programs
CNFA is active in the following countries:
- Afghanistan
- Angola
- Belarus
- Burkina Faso
- Ethiopia
- Georgia
- Ghana
- Haiti
- Kenya
- Malawi
- Mali
- Moldova
- Mozambique
- Niger
- Nigeria
- Pakistan
- Tanzania
- Tajikistan
- Uganda
- Uzbekistan
See also
References
- 1 2 3 http://www.cnfa.org/aboutus/our-history
- ↑ http://www.cnfa.org/aboutus
- ↑ http://www.cnfa.org/our-work/core-capacities
- ↑ http://www.cnfa.org/our-work/donors
- 1 2 CNFA Annual Report 1993-1994
- ↑ CNFA Annual Report 2006, published in 2007