| About the Poverty-Environment Initiative |
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Poor people depend on the environment for their livelihoods and well-being. Improved management of the environment and natural resources contributes direclty to poverty reduction, more sustainable livelihoods and pro-poor growth. To fight poverty, to promote security and to preserve the ecosystems that poor people rely on for their livelihoods, we must place pro-poor economic growth and environmental sustainability at the heart of our economic policies, planning systems and institutions. About the Initiative
As of 2012, the PEI is supporting full programmes in seventeen countries and provides technical advisory services to an additional number of countries across all regions. [PEI Scale-up proposal] [Annual Progress Report 2008, 2009, 2010] [Evaluation: PEI Pilot Programme 2004-2008] [External Mid-Term Review 2011]
About the Poverty-Environment Facility In order to coordinate and support the expansion of the PEI, UNDP and UNEP established in May 2007 a joint global Facility composed of staff from the two partner organizations based in Nairobi. The role of the Facility is to provide strategic direction to the PEI , to coordinate relations with the donors providing funds, to provide technical support and access to knowledge on poverty-environment mainstreaming to the PEI regional and country teams and to provide a hub for a range of partnerships. Read More
About Poverty-Environment Mainstreaming We define poverty-environment mainstreaming as the stepwise process of integrating poverty-environment linkages into development planning for poverty reduction and pro-poor growth at national, sector and local levels. It involves establishing the links between environment and poverty and identifying policies and programmes to bring about better pro-poor environmental management. It is a multi-year, multi-stakeholder effort targeted at influencing policymaking, budgeting, and implementation. It is based on the need to integrate the valuable contribution of environmental management to improved livelihoods, increased economic security and income opportunities for the poor - which is still largely overlooked in development planning and in the wider debate about development priorities. Read More |