Figure 65: Annual renewable freshwater sources per capita in Jordan, the Middle East and
North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa ........................................................................................................ 109
Figure 66: Freshwater withdrawals in Jordan, 1997–2011 .............................................................................. 109
Figure 67: Farm size distribution in Jordan, 1997................................................................................................. 110
Figure 68: Average farm size in Jordan....................................................................................................................... 111
Figure 69: Youth literacy in Jordan............................................................................................................................... 112
Figure 70: Percent of population living on less than US$ 2 per day in Jordan and the Middle
East and North Africa......................................................................................................................................... 112
Figure 71: Financial services in rural and urban Jordan..................................................................................... 113
Boxes
Box 1: Potatoes, fast food, and smallholders in Uganda ......................................................................................... 50 Box 2: Eliminating food safety hazards in Turkey’s livestock subsector and closing gaps in compliance with European Union food safety standards..................................................................... 88 Box 3: Chile’s successful fruit export industry shows the importance of a good enabling environment for linking farmers to markets .......................................................................................... 117 Box 4: Key policies and practices for repsonsible agribusiness investment.............................................. 118 Box 5: Scaling up Nigeria’s e-wallet system for providing inputs to millions of farmers..................... 120 Box 6: Visible impacts of mobile technology on knowledge and information for Uganda’s farmers..................................................................................................................................................................... 121 Box 7: Linking Ethiopian smallholder farmers to markets through a commodity exchange ............. 127 Box 8: An innovative agent model supports market linkages in Zambia..................................................... 128 Box 9: Affordable technology improves food safety and market access in Malawi ................................ 128 Box 10: Contract farming offers multiple benefits for Malagasy smallholders......................................... 133