That ordinary bag of potato chips you’re eyeing may be anything but. If it’s made from potatoes grown in northern Ecuador, it represents sustainable economic opportunities for small farmers, thanks to a partnership between USAID and snack giant PepsiCo/Frito-Lay.
- About FrontLines
- Insights from Administrator Rajiv Shah
PARTNERSHIP
- Aligning the Goals of Development and Business
- In Senegal, Response to Nature’s Call Gets a Clean Makeover
- Stitching the Fabric of Reconciliation
- Hard Rock in Afghanistan
- Your Voice: US-UK Alliance “OK” for Cambodia
- From Blood Diamonds to Fishponds
- One Part USAID, Two Parts Kazakhstan
- Bringing Sight to Armenian Eyes
- Partnering at the Intersection of Business and Development:
An Interview with Walter Bell - In Brazil, Doing Good Is Good for Business
- USAID, MLB and Pittsburgh Pirates
Hit Home-Run for
Education partnership extra - USAID-Backed Loan Produces Healthy
Dividends for Ugandan
Firm on the Move Up partnership extra - Taking Flight in the Balkans partnership extra
- The Power of Development Partnerships:
An Interview with Jane Nelson partnership extra LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
- A New Approach for a Changing Hemisphere
- U.S.-El Salvador Enter True Partnership for Growth
- Beyond Port-au-Prince
- Fighting Crime Through Prevention
- Alternatives to Drug Trade Aim to Empower Northern Ecuadorans
- Latin America Reads a New Chapter
- In Development, Three Heads Are Better than One
- Five Ways to Avoid Gang Life? lac extra
- Growing More with Less in Haiti lac extra
- Your Voice: Promoting Civilian-Military Cooperation Beyond Borders lac extra
- For Afro-Colombians, It Pays to Conserve lac extra
Over six years, USAID has created and fostered a group of over 100 companies dedicated to promote social and environmental development in South America’s largest country.
Isadora Ferreira