Maliasili Initiatives | Page 6 | Land Portal
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Acronym: 
Maliasili
Focal point: 
P.O.Box 293, Underhill, Vermont 05489

Ubicación

Underhill 05489 Vermont , Vermont
Estados Unidos
Vermont US

Maliasili Initiatives is a non-profit organization that supports the growth, development and performance of leading civil society organizations working to advance sustainable natural resource management practices in Africa.

Maliasili Initiatives Resources

Mostrando 26 - 30 de 35
Library Resource
Cover photo

Experiences and insights from working to secure hunter-gatherer and pastoralist land rights in Northern Tanzania

Informes e investigaciones
Diciembre, 2012
Tanzania

In this publication two pioneering grassroots organisations from northern Tanzania examine and present their experiences and insights from their long-term work to secure the land rights of hunter-gatherer and pastoral communities. The case studies were presented at a one-day learning event held on 5th October 2012, when Pastoral Women’s Council (PWC) and Ujamaa Community Resource Team (UCRT) joined together to share and reflect on their work to secure land rights, to learn from each other, and to identify ways to build on their achievements moving forward.


Library Resource
Cover photo
Publicación revisada por pares
Octubre, 2012
Tanzania

Like many of its neighbors, Tanzania is experiencing a well-documented surge of land grabbing related to investments in industries such as agriculture, biofuels, tourism, hunting, and forestry. Land grabbing in Tanzania is best understood and analyzed as both a symptom of and contributor towards wider political economic processes of change occurring in Tanzania.

Library Resource
Cover photo

Report No.3 , Kenya.

Publicación revisada por pares
Septiembre, 2012
Kenya

Across the world, areas with high or important biodiversity are often located within Indigenous peoples’ and local communities’ conserved territories and areas (ICCAs). Traditional and contemporary systems of stewardship embedded within cultural practices enable the conservation, restoration and connectivity of ecosystems, habitats, and specific species in accordance with indigenous and local worldviews. In spite of the benefits ICCAs have for maintaining the integrity of ecosystems, cultures and human wellbeing, they are under increasing threat.

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