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Searching with a thematic focus on Livelihoods, Livelihoods Agriculture in India
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Custodian farmers of agricultural biodiversity: selected profiles from South and South East Asia
MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, 2013Agriculture is the largest global user of biodiversity. Over-reliance on a handful of crops puts global food security at great risk especially in the context of climate change. Selected and used by generations of farmers, agricultural biodiversity contributes to reducing malnutrition, alleviating poverty and combating climate change challenges.DocumentMany lives of women farmers: empowering women farmers in Vidarbha
MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, 2010Globally and nationally, the role of women in agriculture - including crop and animal husbandry, fisheries and forestry - is growing. In spite of the pivotal role played by women in natural resources conservation, cultivation, consumption and commerce, the support systems for such women are very meager.DocumentReflections of women farmers: Programme for the empowerment of women farmers, Vidarbha (Mahila Kisan Sashaktikaran Pariyojana)
MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, 2014Vidarbha, the hot spot of agrarian crisis, has an unenviable record of suicides by farmers in recent decades. The crisis has accentuated the vulnerability of women farmers in general, and the widows of the farmers who have committed suicide in particular.DocumentIntegrated agriculture enhances farm productivity and livelihoods in agro-biodiversity hotspots
MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, 2014India is home to incredible diversity in plant and animal species and is ranked among the richest areas of biodiversity in the world. Unfortunately, much of this diversity is being eroded at an alarming rate, largely due to habitat destruction and invasion by alien species. In the hilly regions of southern India, knownDocumentNo longer tracking greenery in high altitudes: pastoral practices of Rupshu nomads and their implications for biodiversity conservation
Pastoralism, 2013Nomadic pastoralism has thrived in Asia’s rangelands for several millennia by tracking seasonal changes in forage productivity and coping with a harsh climate. This pastoralist lifestyle, however, has come under intense transformations in recent decades due to socio-political and land use changes.DocumentInvisible helpers - women's views on the contributions of working donkeys, horses and mules to their lives
2014In 2011 there were an estimated 112 million working equine animals in the world, with 43 million donkeys, 11 million mules, and 58 million horses. The large majority of these animals live in developing countries and provide daily support to hundreds of millions of poor households by doing a wide range of work in both urban and rural areas.DocumentStrategy for Sustainable Agriculture
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2011The food price crisis of the last decade provided an impetus to the discussions on sustainable development of agriculture. What has since emerged is the belief that agricultural policies need to be revamped to meet the growing demands for food and fibre in most countries.DocumentCreating good employment opportunities for the rural sector
Asian Development Bank, 2011Despite increasing urbanisation in Asia countries, a large fraction of Asia’s poor remain in rural areas. This paper examines the potential for sector-specific productivity growth, human capital, credit markets, and infrastructure to contribute to the development of stable, well-paid employment in rural areas of low-income countries.DocumentAchieving food security in the face of climate change: final report from the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change
Climate Change Agriculture Food Security, 2012This report, released by the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change, identifies a set of clear actions to be undertaken by key stakeholders to achieve food security in the context of climate change.DocumentAdaptive social protection: mapping the evidence and policy context in the agriculture sector in South Asia
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2010The concept of Adaptive Social Protection (ASP) refers to a series of measures which aims to build resilience of the poorest and most vulnerable people to climate change by combining elements of social protection (SP), disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) in programmes and projects. While these approaches have much in common, because they have developed separatelPages
