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Tanzania and Norway

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

Check the most recent online additions, updated daily.

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.

Latest from Eldis


Items 71 to 80 of 82

Illegal hunting is related to land use in agriculture, Serengeti
A. Borge Johannesen / Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 2004
This paper examines the factors which determine participation and effort in illegal hunting, in western Serengeti, Tanzania. It studies the impact on illegal hunting of the integrated conservation and development project, the Serenget...
Bioeconomics of rat control in Tanzania
A. Skonhoft; N.C. Stenseth; H. Leirs; H.P. Andreassen; L.S.A Mulungu / Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 2003
The paper treats the economy of controlling an African pest rodent, the multimammate rat, causing major damage in maize production. The paper presents an ecological population model and uses this as a basis for the economic analyses c...
Study on the benefits of bioprospecting
S.S. Dhillion / Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, Norway, 2002
This article discusses the issues surrounding bioprospecting, paying particular attention to its on conservation and development, through examining bioprospecting case studies in Tanzania, Norway, and Costa Rica. It provides backgroun...
Effects of maize trade liberalisation and fertiliser subsidies on growth and crop production in Tanzania?
S. Grepperud; H. Wiig; F. R. Aune / Statistics Norway, 1999
Human rights of indigenous people in Rwanda and Tanzania
H. P. Hergum / Norwegian Church Aid, 2002
This paper uses a human rights approach to look at the livelihoods of the Batwa of Rwanda and the Hadzabe of Tanzania. It looks at the problems related to the denial of their rights in areas of land, water, education and health care, ...
Interaction between people and wildlife around the Serengeti National Park
B. P. Kaltenborn; J. W. Nyahongo; M. Mayengo / Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, 2003
This report reviews the results from a survey study in communities adjacent to Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. The aim of the study is to understand the cultural and social aspects of the interactions between people and wildlife,...
Communication of seasonal climate forecasts in Southern Africa
K. O'Brien; L. Sygna; L. O. Næss; R. Kingamkono; B. Hochobeb / Center for International Climate and Environmental Research, Oslo, 2000
This report discusses user responses to seasonal climate forecasts in southern Africa, with an emphasis on small-scale farmers in Namibia and Tanzania. The study examines if and how farmers received, used, and perceived the forecasts ...
The importance of integrating the HIV/AIDS dimension in African universities: teaching, collaboration and research
A.M. Ennals; E.C. Rauan / Noragric, Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Norwegian University of L, 2002
The report looks into the status, impact and preventive actions taken by some of the partner universities and colleges in Africa of Agricultural University of Norway (NLH) against the spread of HIV/AIDS. Countries included in the stud...
Intergrating the right to food into Norwegian aid policy
R. Haug; E. C. Rauan / Noragric, Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Norwegian University of L, 2001
This report focuses on how to implement the right to food in four countries in Africa (Ethiopia, Malawi, Tanzania and Zambia). The main purpose is to assess how rights-based development exemplified by the right to food can be better i...
Does agricultural development lead to poverty reduction in Tanzania?
R. Øygard; A Borchgrevink; E Lazaro; A Temu / Noragric, Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Norwegian University of L, 2002
This paper reports on a study designed to analyse the causes of agricultural development in selected areas of Tanzania, and to document the extent to which this development has led to poverty reduction. The paper asks what are ...
Items 71 to 80 of 82

Items 71 to 1 of 1

The Norwegian Embassy in Tanzania
The Government of the Kingdom of Norway and the United Republic of Tanzania established diplomatic relations more than 30 years ago and the two countries have ever since enjoyed cordial relationship. The Norwegian Embassy in Tanzania is responsible for carrying out official and diplomatic communication between the two governments, as well as overseeing development co-operation between Norway and T...
Items 71 to 1 of 1