Résultats de la recherche | Land Portal

Résultats de la recherche

Showing items 1 through 9 of 14.
  1. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    mars, 2016
    Éthiopie, Afrique orientale

    The goals of this review are to: (i) identify options with proven success and high potential for up-scaling in Ethiopian drylands, (ii) analyze factors underlying relative success in different agro-ecologies and under different institutional conditions, and (iii) assess options that may have high potential in areas and systems without well proven successful options.

  2. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    septembre, 2016
    Éthiopie, Afrique orientale

    A system dynamics approach was used to determine the sustainable stocking rate of the Menz sheep population in the Ethiopian highland. A model was developed to simulate stocking rate based on communal grazing land. The model is weather and resource (feed supply) driven. Pasture growth and dynamics was modeled using rainfall and temperature data. Herd dynamics was based on age groups of male and female animals from birth to herd exit, taking production and reproduction parameters into account.

  3. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    décembre, 2016
    Mozambique

    Mozambique's Niassa Reserve contains Africa's best preserved miombo woodlands. Half of the households there gather wild honey from natural hives for consumption and income. However, most collectors used destructive techniques: setting fire to the grasses under the hive tree to create smoke and then felling the tree. Cutting trees to obtain honey was the principal source of tree mortality. Trees grow very slowly, about 0.25 cm diameter at breast hight [dbh] per year, meaning an average hive tree was nearly 200 years old.

  4. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    décembre, 2016
    Mozambique

    Mozambique's Niassa Reserve contains Africa's best preserved miombo woodlands. Half of the households there gather wild honey from natural hives for consumption and income. However, most collectors used destructive techniques: setting fire to the grasses under the hive tree to create smoke and then felling the tree. Cutting trees to obtain honey was the principal source of tree mortality. Trees grow very slowly, about 0.25 cm diameter at breast hight [dbh] per year, meaning an average hive tree was nearly 200 years old.

  5. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    décembre, 2016
    Kenya, Nicaragua

    Tropentag, September 18-21, 2016, Vienna, Austria

    “Solidarity in a competing world —

    fair use of resources”

    Prosperity Prospects in Contested Forest Areas: Evidence from

    Community Forestry Development in Guatemala and Nicaragua

    Dietmar Stoian

    1

    , Aldo Rodas

    2

    , Jessenia Arguello

    3

    1

    Bioversity International, Healthy Diets from Sustainable Food Systems Initiative, France

    2

    Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock, Guatemala, Natural Resources and Agrotourism,

    3

  6. Library Resource
    Documents et rapports de conférence
    décembre, 2016
    Mozambique

    This study evaluated the conservation status of tree populations and the impact of illegal logging in the Niassa National Reserve, a huge protected area in northern Mozambique, bordering Tanzania. The Miombo woodland around 8 villages was sampled on 43 transects laid out from log patios showing evidence of felling. Standing trees and stumps of 8 timber species (P. angolensis, A. quanzensis, M. sthulmannii, B. africana, C. imberbe, D. melanoxylon, P. angolensis and S. madagascariensis) were identified, quantified and measured.

  7. Library Resource

    Bridging the Divide between Land Policy and Practice. Securing women’s land rights through engendering the formalization process of customary land tenure in Uganda: Uganda Community Based Association for Women and Children’s welfare

    Documents et rapports de conférence
    mars, 2016
    Afrique, Ouganda

    The 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda is one of the most gender sensitive constitutions in the world, with clear provisions for promoting and protecting the rights of women. This is also the case in relation to women’s land rights – the Constitution clearly vests land in the people of Uganda, including the rights of women to own and inherit land. Other land laws, including the Land Act, recognize and uphold women’s rights to land as individuals, and as part of a family or community.

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