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Tanzania and Environment

Tanzania
  • Capital: Dodoma
  • Population: 41892895
  • Size: 945087.0 Km2

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Content from selected partners can be found by following the relevant links in the central panel below - or check out our editor's selection of the best sector specific information from other websites.

The BLDS environment collection
The BLDS environment collection

Search for the latest environment-related print documents on this country from the British Library for Development Studies collection

 

Latest from Eldis environment


Items 51 to 60 of 87

Analysing the constraints of conservation interventions that also help to combat poverty
I. Kikula; E. Mnzava; C. Mung’ong’o / Research on Poverty Alleviation, Tanzania, 2003
There are few studies on poverty and the environment that have addressed the question of how measures geared towards solving environmental degradation can also be used as a means of combating poverty. This paper is a survey of conserv...
Cut out the waste says WaterAid report
David Redhouse / id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004
The Decade for Water in the 1980s failed to secure water and sanitation for all. Today the performance of the water sector remains grossly inadequate: more than a billion people have no access to safe water and 2.6 billion have inadeq...
Linkages between poverty and ecosystem services in Tanzania
C. Wong; M. Roy; A.K. Duraiappah / International Institute for Sustainable Development, Winnipeg, 2005
How are Africa’s ecosystems faring? This report provides a preliminary overview of ecosystem services in Tanzania and the corresponding constituents and determinants of well-being related to the availability of these services. Th...
Tree planting essential to securing Maasai people’s livelihood, Tanzania
S. Hauck; G. Edens; K.O. KasiKasi / Eldis Document Store, 2005
Without trees, the important symbiotic relationship between the agro-pastoralist Maasai and their environment will be destroyed. This study assesses the need and desire in the Eluai village in Tanzania for an alternative way to genera...
Governments and institutions must recognise the impact climate change will have on development in East Africa
V.A. Orindi; L.A. Murray / International Institute for Environment and Development, 2005
This paper provides an overview of the likely impacts of climate change in three least developed countries in East Africa: Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda. In the coming decades, climate change is likely to alter temperatures and distribu...
Comparing ICDP conservation projects in Tanzania
A. Johannesen / Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 2004
Based on empirical evidence from Serengeti, Tanzania, this paper explores the effect on illegal hunting, wildlife conservation and human welfare of the most common instruments of existing Integrated Conservation and Development Projec...
Information for effective biodiversity conservation and livelihood protection in the inland waters, Eastern Africa
W. Darwall; K. Smith; T. Lowe; J.-C. Vié / World Conservation Union, 2005
Biodiversity within inland water ecosystems in Eastern Africa is both highly diverse and of great regional importance to livelihoods and economies. However, development activities are not always compatible with the conservation of thi...
Meeting the different needs of livestock farmers in Tanzania
A.D. Maeda Muchango / id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005
Traditional livestock production systems are economically vital in many countries in Africa, but are often poorly understood. In Tanzania, men and women play different roles in the management and ownership of cattle, goats, chicken an...
Proposals and strategies to manage and protect fragile ecosystems in East Africa
J. K. Kairu; G. M. Sikoyo / African Centre for Technology Studies, 2002
The East African Community (EAC) initiated a process to prepare common guidelines for the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of shared aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems of East Africa. The shared terrestrial ecosystems of East Afr...
Debating natural resource accounting policy options for Tanzania
W. N. Mkanta; M. M. B. Chimtembo / Centre for Environmental Economics and Policy in Africa, Pretoria, 2002
The aim of this study was twofold: valuation of non-marketed forest resources and proposing means for generation of modified national accounts that would cover the full value of forest resource production (and consumption). Land cover...
Items 51 to 60 of 87

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Environment profiles on Tanzania

Content from selected partners