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Searching with a thematic focus on Environment, Environment and natural resource management, natural resource management CBNRM in Zimbabwe
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The Complex Politics of Water and Power in Zimbabwe: IWRM in the Catchment Councils of Manyame, Mazowe and Sanyati (1993-2001) - file
Water Alternatives, 2016In the mid - nineties Zimbabwe formed participatory institutions known as catchment a nd sub - catchment councils based on river basins to govern and manage its waters. These councils were initially funded by a range of donors anticipating that they could become self - funding over time through the sale of water.DocumentCAMPFIRE and the payment for environmental services
Center for International Forestry Research, 2005This paper explores lessons learned from the Communal Areas Management Programme for Indigenous Resources (CAMPFIRE) as a precursor to Payment for Environmental Services (PES). It focuses on the implementation, performance, outcomes and possible adaptations that might be of use for PES.DocumentOf global concern: rural livelihood dynamics and natural resource governance
Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, 2006The global challenges of hunger, poverty and disease have led to an increasing focus within global initiatives - policies and strategies - on conditions and developments in rural areas in the South. The aim of this paper is to analyse and understand the rural livelihood dynamics and natural resource governance that are unfolding across continents.DocumentDemocratic decentralization of natural resources: institutionalizing popular participation
World Resources Institute, Washington DC, 2002Series of case studies exploring the how natural resource decentralizations have taken place and their measurable social and environmental outcomes.DocumentLand, people and forests in Eastern and Southern Africa: a study of the impact of land relations upon community involvement in forest future
Land Rights in Africa, Oxfam, 2000Examines the relationship of people’s rights in land to the manner in which they may be involved in the management of forests in Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Zambia, Malawi, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia, Mozambique, Lesotho and to a lesser degree Botswana and Swaziland.Includes examination of property relations, state power, land reform, recognition of customary rights, the changing nature oDocumentCan CAMPFIRE go beyond elephant?
Institute of Environmental Studies, Zimbabwe, 1999Policy brief looking at whether the CAMPFIRE initiatives that involve empowering local communities to manage and benefit from their natural resources can be applied to a broader spectrum of woodland resources.It identifies the following problems:a legal and policy framework which is not enabling to local managementweakened local institutional structuresa high degree of differen
