The cashew nut is a perennial festival favourite, with an annual import and export value soaring past $4bn. Although the sweet-tasting nut is grown in some of the poorest parts of the world, it fetches a premium price in wealthy countries.
Oxfam GB expects to cut 125 jobs in the UK as part of a revamp in which the charity will scale back the delivery of large development projects in middle-income countries to focus on policy and advocacy. The charity had been planning a shift in strategy, but the timing has been accelerated because of financial pressures.
Thanks to the use of these vaccines and other scientific advancements in the farthest reaches of the world, wild poliovirus cases dropped globally to 223 in just five countries in 2012, an all-time low and a more than 99% decrease from the estimated 350,000 cases in 1988.
Climate change must be integrated into the post-2015 agenda, as ignoring it may condemn many Africans to a life of poverty
1) Protect and invest in African ecosystems
2) Make adaptation and climate risk management core elements of post-2015 development agenda
3) Take advantage of mitigation opportunities
4) Promote Sustainable agriculture and provide support to expand sustainable agriculture methods
5) Manage water
6) Investment in climate smart infrastructures
7) Focus on knowledge and capacity development
8) Invest in information services
UK aid programmes to support education in three east African countries - together worth more than £1bn - are failing to improve children's basic literacy and maths skills, according to a report published on Friday by the Independent Commission for Aid Impact (ICAI).
India's rush for industrialisation may be stymied by a lack of power for its factories, but, barely noticed, solar electricity is being taken to thousands of villages in one of the most ambitious grassroots projects ever attempted. Five years ago an estimated 400 million people lived with rudimentary, low-quality kerosene lamps, providing poor, polluting and often dangerous light.
Human rights abuses in Ethiopia's Lower Omo valley are said to be rampant, with tribal leaders imprisoned, dozens of people killed and troops cracking down on dissent ahead of the building of a massive dam, which is forcing the relocation of some of the most remote tribes in Africa.