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Searching with a thematic focus on Environment, Environment and Forestry, Agriculture and food, Governance, Environmental protection natural resource management, Forest policies and management, Poverty
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Policy, planning and institutional arrangements: FAO State of the World's Forests 1997: Part 2
State of the World's Forests, FAO, 1999DocumentSituation and prospects for forest conservation and development: FAO State of the World's Forests 1997: Part 1
State of the World's Forests, FAO, 1999DocumentAgricultural and rural development policy in Latin America: new directions and new challenges (de Janvry / Sadoulet / Key)
Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Berkeley, 1999DocumentRural finance for growth and poverty alleviation in Pakistan
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1996To promote agricultural --- and hence economic --- growth, Pakistan must make more credit available to agricultural smallholders, the rural non farm sector, and women. Subsidizing interest rates is not the way to help marginal borrowers.DocumentDebt Relief for Low-Income Countries and the HIPC Initiative
International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997Since the onset of the debt crisis in the early 1980s, many heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs), continue to have difficulty in paying their external debt-service obligations, largely because of exogenous factors, imprudent debt-management policies, and the lack of sustained adjustment or implementation of structural reforms.DocumentDeclaration of Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Summit of the Americas)
Center for Hemispheric Policy, 1999DocumentFinland's Development Cooperation in the 1990s: Strategic goals nd means
Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Department for International Development Cooperation / FINNIDA, 1999DocumentThe costs and benefits of Korean Unification
Institute for International Economics, USA, 1997"We construct the Korean Integration Model (KIM), a two-country computable general equilibrium (CGE) model linking the North and South Korean economies. Using KIM, we simulate the impact of a customs union and a monetary union of the two economies both in the presence and absence of cross-border factor mobility, treating technological transfer in three ways.Pages
