Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Livelihoods, Livelihoods natural resource management
Showing 231-240 of 330 results
Pages
- Document
Secure water?: poverty, livelihoods and demand-responsive approaches
Overseas Development Institute, 2008This article conceptualises a methodological framework called Secure Water Assessment (SWA) which offers a way of thinking through the complex and multiple linkages between water, poverty and livelihoods. The objective of SWA is to find a balance between financial sustainability of water supply and poverty reduction.DocumentThe productive use of domestic water supplies: how water supplies can play a wider role in livelihood improvement and poverty reduction
IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, 2008Contrary to the beliefs of many planners and engineers, large quantities of any 'domestic' water supply are used for 'non-domestic' productive purposes. People do not just drink water, or use it to wash or cook. They use it to grow crops, water livestock, produce goods, and provide services in and around the household.DocumentBeyond tenure: rights based approaches to peoples and forests. Some lessons from the Forest Peoples Programme
The Rights and Resources Initiative, 2008Although the historical focus on tenure reforms has resulted in some important improvements in the livelihoods of forest communities, it has not prevented them from suffering social exclusion and impoverishment.DocumentWorld resources 2008: roots of resilience—growing the wealth of the poor
World Resources Institute, Washington DC, 2008Three-quarters of the world’s poorest citizens – those living on less than $2 per day – are dependent on the environment for a significant part of their daily livelihoods. But the world’s natural resources are increasingly being degraded amidst climate change and population growth.DocumentUse of a bayesian belief network to predict the impacts of commercializing non-timber forest products on livelihoods
Ecology and Society, 2006Which non-timber forest products (NTFP) can contribute most to livelihoods, and how could this be measured? This paper describes a model combining a Bayesian Belief Network with the livelihoods framework to predict the impact of NTFP commercialisation on livelihoods.DocumentThe reality of trying to transform structures and processes: forestry in rural livelihoods
Overseas Development Institute, 2000What are the key constraints to improving forest based livelihoods within the forest sector? What are the key relationships that provide the institutional context in which forest based livelihoods operate? The authors focus on a forestry project in Karnataka, India to illustrate the processes and problems of supporting livelihood change in the forestry institutional environment.DocumentThe nature and role of local benefits in GEF program areas: methodology
Global Environment Facility, 2003Do projects advancing global environmental goals generate benefits to local livelihoods? How do local livelihood benefits contribute to global environmental goals? This report, prepared by the Global Environmental Facility (GEF), Office of Monitoring and Evaluation, sets out the methodology to be used for an (ongoing) review of projects in the GEF portfolio.DocumentSustainable livelihoods and project design in India
Overseas Development Institute, 2000How can the Sustainable Livelihoods (SL) framework be used in project design? The author of this paper draws lessons from two project design experiences in Orissa and in Andhra Pradesh, India, where the SL principals and framework were incorporated and utilised in different ways.DocumentSustainable livelihood opportunities and resource management in coastline communes facing special difficulties
Overseas Development Institute, 2004What are the livelihoods and poverty issues facing coastline communes in Vietnam? How can poverty alleviation programmes best respond to them? This publication reports on research carried out for the Government of Vietnam to inform a new national programme supporting infrastructure development in coastal areas exposed to harsh conditions.DocumentReturning thirsty: water, livelihoods and returnees in the Gash-Barka Region, Eritrea
Overseas Development Institute, 2002What are the socio-environmental impacts of water supply development in a fragile environment? What are the key factors in the planning of water provision?Pages
