Agroforestry, reforestry and the carbon problem: the role of land and tree tenure
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Global
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Afrique, Somalie
Unruh JD (1995) Post-conflict recovery of African agriculture: The role of 'critical resource'
tenure. Ambio 24: 343-350 -
Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Somalie
Unruh JD (1995) Pastoralist resource use and access in Somalia: a changing context of
development, environmental stress, and conflict. In: Sorenson J (ed.) Disaster and Development on the Horn of Africa. Macmillan, London -
Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Somalie
Indigenous resource tenure systems in Africa have evolved to meet the constraints and opportunities of often difficult biophysical environments, while facilitating the operation of complex spatial and temporal land use patterns. Traditional systems provide security of tenure in culturally relevant ways that permit adaptation to new circumstances. On the other hand imposed tenure structures in Africa have often not strengthened individual rights and have often blocked indigenous tenure development and adaptation in response to new situations.
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Afrique orientale
A comparative analysis of the development of the different land tenure systems in Kenya and Tanzania, and the merits and challenges of both.
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Asie méridionale, Afrique, République-Unie de Tanzanie, Bangladesh, Botswana, Chine, Inde, Niger, Zimbabwe
"Rapid expansion of employment in low-income countries is one of the biggest challenges of development. The growth in labor supply in developing countries will remain large for a long time to come. Incomes of the poor in rural areas will depend more and more on productive off-farm work, and in the rapidly expanding urban areas, food security will depend largely on jobs and wage rates"--P. xiii.
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresjanvier, 1995Thaïlande
Agricultural growth in Thailand from the Second World War until about 1980 was dominated by a massive expansion in the land area under cultivation. During this period Thailand was probably the only country in Asia that saw an expansion in cultivated land per agricultural worker (figure 5.1). The availability of land allowed agriculture to continue to absorb large amounts of labor, with the consequence that Thailand still has a larger proportion of its labor force in agriculture than other Asian countries at similar income levels (figure 5.2).1
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresdécembre, 1995
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Library ResourceArticles et Livresdécembre, 1995Afrique orientale, Afrique sub-saharienne, Afrique, Kenya
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Library ResourcePublication évaluée par des pairsArticles et Livresdécembre, 1995
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