CDA’s Agrarian Reform activities are contributing to Earth and Climate through Organic Compost
CDA’s Agrarian Reform activities are contributing to Earth and Climate through Organic Compost
Uzbekistan has embarked on significant reforms since early 2017, aiming to improve the lives of ordinary citizens, enable business development, and open up to neighbors. The scale of changes is unprecedented. The new government aspires to modernize the country and to move it toward upper middle-income status.
CDA’s Agrarian Reform activities are contributing to Earth and Climate through Organic Compost
CDA’s Agrarian Reform activities are contributing to Earth and Climate through Organic Compost
In January 2019, Uzbekistan started a new farm restructuring1. It is said to seek to optimize the use of farmland by increasing the size of farms producing wheat and cotton, reallocating land to more efficient farmers and even clusters, and improving crop rotation options. This is not the first time that this kind of farm restructuring in Uzbekistan takes place.
A lot of aspects are commonly subsumed under the concept land reform. These range from redistribution to tenure and agrarian reform. What do these different concepts mean? Agrarian reform: this is the broadest term and refers to attempts to change the agrarian structure of a country.
Communal land is one of the land tenure systems in Namibia, the other being freehold land tenure system.
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