Résultats de la recherche | Land Portal

Résultats de la recherche

Showing items 1 through 9 of 59.
  1. Library Resource

    Utilization of Existing Land Use Patterns in Designs for Multiple Access of "High Potential" Areas of Semi-Arid Africa

    Articles et Livres
    janvier, 1991
    Afrique, Somalie

    Abstract
    The persistent interplay of food production problems, land
    degradation, and social and climatic difficulties on the Horn of
    Africa result in recurring famines in spite of vast sums of money
    spent on agricultural development. As land resources--which
    undergird both social and production systems in Africa--become
    increasingly degraded, development efforts, especially in
    problematic areas, need to become part of comprehensive resource
    use programs that take into account the existing regional land

  2. Library Resource
    Articles et Livres
    janvier, 1991
    Zambie, Afrique

    In late 1985, the International Food Policy Research Institute in collaboration with the Rural Development Studies Bureau of the University of Zambia, the National Food and Nutrition Commission, and the Easter Provice Agricultural Development Project embarked on a major research project in Eastern Province, Zambia. The study sought to obtain a better understanding of the public policies that govern the country's push to increase agricultural production and improve the participation of smallholder farmers in it.

  3. Library Resource
    janvier, 1991
    Afrique, Afrique sub-saharienne

    This article uses cross-sectional evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Rwanda in 1987–88 to examine the question, Are indigenous land rights systems in Sub-Saharan Africa a constraint on productivity? The evidence supports the hypothesis suggested by historical studies, that African indigenous land rights systems have spontaneously evolved from systems of communal control towards individualized rights in response to increases in commercialization and population pressure.

  4. Library Resource
    janvier, 1992
    Ghana, Rwanda

    Farm fragmentation, in which a household operates more than one separate parcel of land, is a common phenomenon in Sub-Saharan Africa. Concerned by the perceived costs of fragmented as opposed to consolidated holdings, several countries have implemented land consolidation programs. But these interventions overlook the benefits that land fragmentation can offer farmers in managing risk, in overcoming seasonal labor bottlenecks, and in better matching soil types with necessary food crops.

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