Back

Who we are

With research staff from more than 60 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Kate Ambler

Kate Amber is a Senior Research Fellow in the Markets, Trade, and Institutions Unit. Kate’s research broadly focuses on interventions that can increase incomes for smallholders and other microenterprises in agrifood value chains, with a specific focus on the inclusion of women. This includes work on programming in fragile settings, innovations in agricultural finance, and regulatory solutions for food safety. 

Where we work

Back

Where we work

IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 80 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

Policy Research for Evolving Food Systems Needs

Looking Toward 2050

What’s New


Journal Article

Educational responses to local and migration destination shocks: Evidence from China

2025Leight, Jessica; Pan, Yao

Educational responses to local and migration destination shocks: Evidence from China

Over the last 20 years, China has experienced substantial positive shocks to export-oriented industries—especially following its accession to the World Trade Organization—and these shocks have had major implications for human capital investment. One primary channel through which export expansion can shape choices about human capital accumulation is positive labor-demand shocks, and these shocks can be observed both at potential within-country migration destinations and in the locality of birth. Exploiting cross-county variation in the reduction in export tariff uncertainty post-WTO, both locally and at plausible migration destinations, this analysis finds that youth in China reaching matriculation age post-accession in counties experiencing a larger export shock (either locally or at those destinations) show a lower probability of enrolling in high school. This pattern is observed in a sample including both youth who ultimately migrate and youth who do not migrate. For urban youth, the effects of local shocks are larger than the effects of destination shocks, but the opposite pattern is observed for rural youth. A supplementary online appendix is available with this article at The World Bank Economic Review website. JEL classification: F14, F16, J24, O15, O18, O19

Year published

2025

Authors

Leight, Jessica; Pan, Yao

Citation

Leight, Jessica; and Pan, Yao. Educational responses to local and migration destination shocks: Evidence from China. World Bank Economic Review. Article in press. First published online November 20, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhae050

Country/Region

China

Keywords

Asia; Eastern Asia; Capital; Exports; Human Capital; Shock; Trade; Transport; International Organizations

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Harness agrifood value chains to help farmers be climate smart: Incentives and structures exist to improve farming practices

2024Swinnen, Johan; Ronchi, Loraine; Reardon, Thomas

Harness agrifood value chains to help farmers be climate smart: Incentives and structures exist to improve farming practices

Year published

2024

Authors

Swinnen, Johan; Ronchi, Loraine; Reardon, Thomas

Citation

Swinnen, Johan; Ronchi, Loraine; and Reardon, Thomas. 2024. Harness agrifood value chains to help farmers be climate smart: Incentives and structures exist to improve farming practices. Science 386(6725): 974-977. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adr6193

Keywords

Agrifood Systems; Climate Change Mitigation; Farmers; Value Chains

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Nutrient-dense foods and diverse diets are important for ensuring adequate nutrition across the life course

2024Beal, Ty; Manohar, Swetha; Miachon, Lais; Fanzo, Jessica

Nutrient-dense foods and diverse diets are important for ensuring adequate nutrition across the life course

The world faces a global challenge of how to meet the nutritional needs of a diverse global population through diets. This paper defines the relative nutritional needs across each stage of the life cycle to support human health and identifies who is nutritionally vulnerable. Findings in this paper suggest that there are biological nutritional vulnerabilities stemming from high micronutrient needs per calorie in certain phases of the life cycle, particularly for infants and young children, women of reproductive age, pregnant and lactating women, and older adults, particularly older women. The paper demonstrates the role of micronutrient-dense animal-source foods and plant-source foods important in meeting essential nutrient needs to support healthy growth, development, and aging across vulnerable stages of the life cycle.

Year published

2024

Authors

Beal, Ty; Manohar, Swetha; Miachon, Lais; Fanzo, Jessica

Citation

Beal, Ty; Manohar, Swetha; Miachon, Lais; and Fanzo, Jessica. 2024. Nutrient-dense foods and diverse diets are important for ensuring adequate nutrition across the life course. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 121(50). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2319007121

Keywords

Nutrition; Diet; Health; Life Cycle; Trace Elements; Gender

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

The 2024 Global Food Policy Report

Food systems and diets underpin many critical challenges to public health and environmental sustainability, including malnutrition, noncommunicable diseases, and climate change, but healthy diets have the unique potential to reshape the future for both human and planetary well-being. Drawing on recent evidence and experience, the 2024 Global Food Policy Report highlights opportunities for transforming food systems to ensure sustainable healthy diets for all.

Experts in Our Field

IFPRI’s experts work around the world to provide the evidence that supports effective policies to reduce poverty and end malnutrition.

600+

staff across the world

80+

countries where we work

#1

in the field of Agricultural Economics

20,000+

research outputs

Meet a Researcher

Oliver K. Kirui is a Research Fellow in the Development Strategies and Governance Unit, based in Nairobi. He is currently part of the team leading the establishment of the Sudan Strategy Support Program, which aims to develop research-based policy solutions, build coalitions for policy change, and co-create innovative analytical tools in close collaboration with several partners. Oliver conducts and supports research related to several policy-relevant topics such as agricultural and economic transformation, markets and trade, livelihoods and nutrition, development strategy and…

Oliver Kiptoo Kirui

From our video channel

Building Drought Resilience: How Ethiopia’s SPIR Program Protects Women and Families (AMH SUB)

Climate change is accelerating drought shocks and deepening gender disparities. In Ethiopia, researchers from the CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality (HER+) partnered with World Vision, CARE, and ORDA Ethiopia to assess whether SPIR, a social protection program with livelihood and nutrition components, helped poor rural women and their households cope with droughts.

Our Events

Making a Difference Blog Series

For more than three decades, IFPRI has worked with the Government of Ethiopia to provide evidence-based advice on the development of the country’s agricultural sector.

IFPRI’s research and policy recommendations led to the establishment of Ethiopia’s Agricultural Transformation Agency (ATA) in 2010, which continues to play a critical role in guiding the country’s agricultural development and sustainability.

Tamsin Zandstra, Gashaw T. Abate, Shahidur Rashid, and Nicholas Minot outline how IFPRI’s long-term strategic research support to the ATA has led to several tangible government policy outcomes.