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Searching with a thematic focus on Gender, Norway in Ethiopia
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Gender review: mainstreaming gender in the development portfolio of the Norwegian embassy in Ethiopia
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2009This paper includes a gender review of the Norwegian embassy’s portfolio in Ethiopia on natural resource management and food security. The paper aims at identifying ways and means of addressing and integrating women’s and gender concerns into the current agreements within present framework and budgets.DocumentWhy is land productivity lower on land rented out by female landlords?: theory, and evidence from Ethiopia
Department of Economics and Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, 2008There is a common view and belief that women are the ones that do the farming in Africa while the men do not work much. This paper seeks to find explanations to why land productivity is lower on land rented out by female landlord households than on land rented out by male landlord households in the Ethiopian highlands.DocumentFrom being property of men to becoming equal owners?: early impacts of land registration and certification on women in southern Ethiopia
Centre for Property Rights and Development, Norwegian Mapping and Cadastre Authority, 2008Land certification has been implemented in Ethiopia since 1998 and over 5 million certificates have been delivered. This is the largest delivery of non-freehold rights in such a short time period in Sub Saharan Africa.DocumentFemale-headed households and livelihood intervention in four selected weredas in Tigray, Ethiopia
Drylands Coordination Group, Norway, 2006This report looks at the activities of different organisations working for the improved livelihood of the local community in Tigray, Ethiopia, with a particular emphasis on the Women's Association of Tigray (WAT), as an indigenous NGO.DocumentThe culture of power in contemporary Ethiopian political life
SIDA Studies, 2003This paper looks at the culture of power and politics in Ethiopia, focusing on the nature and potential of political opposition to the ruling party, EPRDF. It argues that, for at least the next 10 years, there seem to be few viable national alternative political forces to the parties of the EPRDF.Pages
