Search

Reset

Searching in Kenya, Tanzania

Showing 201-210 of 293 results

Pages

  • Document

    Agriculture versus protected areas

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004
    Agriculturalists strive to increase crop production to provide poor communities with incomes and a secure food supply whilst environmentalists want to expand protected areas and reduce the intensity of farming.
  • Document

    Customary land delivery practices in African urban areas

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004
    Urban poor people in sub-Saharan Africa, often excluded from formal systems of land management, increasingly obtain shelter through other means. Informal systems to deliver land in cities borrow features from rural customs.
  • Document

    Tackling illegal fishing practices in Africa’s protected waters

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005
    Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing is increasingly affecting the fisheries revenues of developing countries. The global cost of IUU fishing practices is estimated to be in excess of US$ 2.4 billion annually, about US$900 million for sub-Saharan Africa alone.
  • Document

    Foreign direct investment by African countries

    Overseas Development Institute, 2005
    Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) from developing countries has risen sharply over the past two decades. Most FDI has been by Asian firms establishing footholds in other Asian countries but there has also been investment in developed countries such as the European Union. However, with the exception of South African investment, there is little FDI stemming from Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Document

    The education of nomadic peoples in East Africa: review of relevant literature

    International Institute for Educational Planning, UNESCO, 2005
    In the context of a renewed committment to Education For All (EFA) at Dakar, this study examines the apparent failure of most attempts to provide educational services to nomadic groups. The study focuses on Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.
  • Document

    Ending legalised violence against children: report for the East and Southern Africa regional consultation

    Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, 2005
    This report reviews law and policy in relation to corporal punishment and deliberate humiliation of children in each state in East and Southern Africa.
  • Document

    Post-July 2004 African strategies for bilateral and multilateral trade negotiations

    Southern African Regional Poverty Network, 2004
    This report presents the findings of a workshop aimed at strengthening the capacity of East African trade policymakers and negotiators, as well as other stakeholders in pursuing their objectives in trade negotiations following the July Package agreed to by the WTO General Council (2004). The report offers key recommendations and observation on a number of issues.
  • Document

    Using empirical information in the era of HIV/AIDS to inform mitigation and rural development strategies: selected results from African country studies

    The Department of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics - Michigan State University, 2005
    This study looks at the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the socioeconomic impacts in Sub-Saharan Africa on the agricultural sector.
  • Document

    Assessment of violence against children in the Eastern and Southern Africa region

    United Nations Children's Fund, 2005
    This study provides an extensive picture of violence against children in Eastern and Southern Africa, providing regional and country specific information on national legal and policy frameworks and enforcements.
  • Document

    Human rights, formalisation and women’s land rights in southern and eastern Africa

    Institute of Women's Law, University of Oslo, 2005
    Land is a vital resource for rural livelihoods. Establishing and clarifying land rights through formalisation has become a key issue in development policies that aim to promote more productive uses of land. This report sets out a human rights-based approach (HRBA) for gender-equal and non-discriminatory land reform.

Pages