“…Another improvement from previous literature is the fact that several new studies collected rich data to document the impacts of agricultural programs along the project-specific hypothesized pathways, strengthening the plausibility of impacts on maternal and child diets and nutritional status outcomes. For example, results from the evaluation of the Enhanced Homestead Food Production (EHFP) system, which incorporates a stronger nutrition education intervention using social behavior change approaches, among other components, in Burkina Faso and Zambia showed impacts on specific dimensions of women's empowerment such as social capital, ownership of and control over assets, and decision making in selected domains, and a number of studies documented impacts on maternal infant and young child feeding (IYCF) knowledge, practices, or both (Miller et al, 2014;van den Bold et al, 2015;Murty et al, 2016;Kumar et al, 2018). These findings confirm the hypothesized mediating (and in some case modifying) role of women's empowerment and improved knowledge and practices in fostering nutrition impacts from agriculture (SPRING, 2014).…”