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Towards natural resource accounting in Tanzania: a study on the contribution of natural forests to national income
Centre for Environmental Economics and Policy in Africa, Pretoria, 2002The 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).DocumentShared terrestrial ecosystems of East Africa: towards conviviality
African Centre for Technology Studies, 2002The 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 Africa include wetlands, forest ecosystems and protected wildlife ecosystems.DocumentShared aquatic ecosystems of East Africa: status and trends
African Centre for Technology Studies, 2002The 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.DocumentSurvival and success among African manufacturing firms
Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford, 2004This paper examines why African economies have remained largely unsuccessful despite competition-enhancing economic reforms. In this paper, the authors consider the roles of learning, competition and market imperfections in determining three aspects of firm performance, namely firm exit, firm growth and productivity growth.DocumentHIV-positive women report more lifetime partner violence: findings from a voluntary counseling and testing clinic in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
American Journal of Public Health, 2002This study explores the link between HIV and violence against women (VAW) by comparing the experiences of partner violence between HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in Tanzania. The study found that the odds of reporting at least one violent event were significantly higher among HIV-positive women than among HIV-negative women.DocumentHIV-positive women report more lifetime partner violence: findings from a voluntary counseling and testing clinic in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
American Journal of Public Health, 2002How are rates of HIV affected by levels of violence against women? This study explores the link between HIV and violence against women (VAW) by comparing the experiences of partner violence among HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in Tanzania. The study found that there was a strong association between prior history of violence and a woman's HIV status.DocumentPoverty reduction strategies and relevant learning in higher agricultural education: case studies from Ethiopia, Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda
Noragric, Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, 2003This paper analyses agricultural higher education in relation to poverty reduction strategies in four African countries: Ethiopia, Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda.The paper addresses three key issues in the four African countries:how the PRSPs are reflected in official policies, implementation plans and fund allocations to agricultural educationhow case study countries agricultural educDocumentAfrican Economic Outlook 2003/2004
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2004The third edition of the African Economic Outlook assesses recent economic changes and likely evolutions and challenges on the continent.DocumentTurning off the taps: donor conditionality and water privatisation in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
ActionAid International, 2004This paper examines the long-standing trend of international aid donors to demand that recipient countries privatise basic services and liberalise economies. These demands have been enforced through donor conditionality.DocumentThe Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture: a review of progress and challenges in the SADC region
Department of Agricultural Economics, Extension and Rural Development, University of Pretoria, 2003The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA) bears important implications for developing countries, including those of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), whose agricultural sectors are critical to economic growth, poverty alleviation and food security.Pages
