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Searching with a thematic focus on Environment, Biodiversity and environment
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Global forest resources assessment 2005: progress towards sustainable forest management
Forestry Department, FAO, 2005This extensive FAO assessment of global forest resources, describes the extent, uses and value of forest resources covering 229 countries and territories between 1990 and 2005.DocumentPayments for environmental services: some nuts and bolts
Center for International Forestry Research, 2005Payments for environmental services (PES) is an emerging economics based methodology of conservation management.DocumentIncreasing the resilience of tropical hillside communities through forest landscape restoration
Climate Change, International Institute for Sustainable Development, 2003Tropical hillsides in Latin America, Africa and Asia cover 9% of the world’s landmass and hold 20% of the world’s fresh water. These ecosystems, however, are fragile and vulnerable to unstable climatic conditions and human impacts.Nearly half of hillside inhabitants live in absolute poverty.DocumentMaize farming in Kenya: where did it go wrong?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006Maize is an important food crop for almost everyone in Kenya. The development of new technologies and farming methods during the 1960s and 1970s saw large improvements in crop production, but this growth has not been sustained. What caused this decline in maize production and what can be learnt for the global fight against poverty and hunger?DocumentEconomic benefits of biodiversity exceed costs of conservation at an African rainforest reserve
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 2005This paper quantifies the costs and benefits of avian biodiversity at a rainforest reserve in Uganda through a combination of economic surveys of tourists, spatial land-use analyses, and species-area relationships.DocumentThe complex links between governance and biodiversity
Department of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University, 2005Although it might seem self-evident that corrupt politicians and bureaucrats in developing countries often exploit their positions of power, this document argues that there are two problems which weaken the claims of those who link corruption and the exploitation of natural resources.The first argument is conceptual, in that studies that use national level indicators of corruption fail to noteDocumentA methodological guide on how to identify trends and linkages between changes in land use, biodiversity and land degradation
Land Use Change, Impacts and Dynamics, 2004Land quality in the man-modified agricultural landscapes of eastern Africa has been shown to degrade over time, resulting in higher demands for farm inputs in order to sustain productivity. Loss of biodiversity has also been observed in all these areas of land use change.DocumentShortcomings of linkages between environmental conservation initiatives and poverty alleviation in Tanzania
Research on Poverty Alleviation, Tanzania, 2003There are few studies on poverty and the environment that have addressed the question of how measures geared towards solving environmental degradation can also be used as a means of combating poverty. This paper is a survey of conservation initiatives and interventions that can be used as entry points for addressing issues of poverty alleviation in Tanzania.DocumentConservation in conflict: the impact of the Maoist-Government conflict on conservation and biodiversity in Nepal
International Institute for Sustainable Development, Winnipeg, 2005Now in its ninth year of conflict between Maoists rebels and the government, Nepal has seen more than 12,000 people killed and worsening political, social, and economic instability.DocumentA ‘blue revolution’ for African agriculture
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005Water plays a critical role in increasing agricultural production. Agricultural performance drives poverty trends in Africa and goes a long way in achieving food security. Making the most effective use of water is a major policy challenge for the whole continent.Pages
