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| International Institute for Environment and Development |
| IIED is an independent, non-profit organization promoting sustainable patterns of world development through collaborative research, policy studies, networking and knowledge dissemination. We work to address global issues such as mining, the paper industry and food systems. |
| Website: www.iied.org |
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| Mamiraua Sustainable Development Reserve, Brazil : Lessons Learnt in Integrating Conservation woth Poverty Reduction |
| Stock Code 9168IIED, IIED 2006 Paper 75 Pag Price USD 25.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
In May 2002, there was a review of the approach taken in management of the Mamiraua Sustainable Development Reserve in Brazil. This review yielded many valuable lessons regarding how to begin to reconcile conservation and development objectives with an economically poor and socially marginalized area. It analyses the approach adopted for collaborative management in fisheries and forestry, in creating enabling policy frameworks, and the introduction of alternative economic activities based on conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity. |
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| Towards better practice in smallholder palm oil production |
| Stock Code 13533IIED, IIED 2006 paperback 55 pages Price USD 14.00 |
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Demand for palm oil is growing fast. Global production has doubled over the past ten years and is expected to double again in the next decade. This report provides a systematic overview of the main types of arrangements for smallholder palm oil production, and identies the most promising current options for improving practice, particularly in arrangements of smallholders with plantation companies and government agencies. |
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| Portraits of family farming in West Africa |
| Stock Code 9549IIED, IIED 2005 paperback 32 pages Price USD 9.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
This paper shows that the stereotyped image of family farming as archaic and hide-bound is fase through presenting three family farms, in Ghana, Senegal and Mali. Like the case studies presented, throughout West Africa there are many examples of small-scale producers who have established economically viable farms And who are contributing to the sustainable management of local natural resources. This paper is part of IIEDs programme on the transformations in West African agriculture and the future of family farms. |
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| Winners and Losers: Privatising the Commons in Botswana. Securing the Commons No. 9 |
| Stock Code 9529IIED, IIED 2005 paperback 33 pages Price USD 15.00 |
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In recent years, the "Botswana model" of rangeland policy has been heralded by many as a successful example of government intervention to improve the performance of the livestock sector. The simplicity of the theoretical assumptions underpinning the "model" (the so-called "tragedy of the commons" theory) and of the policy implications that it entails (privatisation of common rangelands), make Botswana’s experience an appealing example for policy makers and donor agencies alike across Africa. |
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| From colonisation to consultation: Regulating use of a pastoral zone in Samorogouan, Burkina Faso |
| Stock Code 9505IIED, IIED 2004 paperback 44 pages Price USD 9.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
Are natural resources in the Sahel under threat? There is widespread concern that current management practices, conflict and competition jeopardise the future of natural resources. But this case study shows how growing awareness of pressure on grazing and farming land and how increasing conflicts between different user groups drove local actors to take steps to regulate access and use of these resources. |
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| Making Land Rights more Secure: International Workshop for researchers and policy makers. Ouagadougou, 19-21 March 2002. |
| Stock Code 9446IIED, IIED 2004 CD-ROM Price USD 25.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
This International Workshop on making land right more secure brought together some 80 people from different parts of West Africa to consider the results of recent research and practical experience in the area of land tenure security. Over a three day meeting, researchers, decision-makers, leaders of farmers’ organisations and elected councillors got to grips with the notion of tenure security and debated new approaches which might improve the situation for rural producers. These edited papers show why the issue of tenure security had come to the fore in the economic and institutional context of the 1990s. Characterised by economic liberalisation, structural adjustment, democratisation and administrative decentralisation, this period marked a clear break with the post-Independence situation. With the advent of globalisation, further wide-ranging changes are appearing on the horizon. It is therefore all the more essential to work out appropriate rules governing competition for land. Negotiations between the State and farmers’ organisations, some examples of which were discussed during the workshop, are leading to more democratic practices involving civil society organisations and experts in the debate on agriculture and land tenure. |
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| Pression foncière et nouvelles normes d’accès à la terre : vers une déféminisation de l'agriculture au sud Niger ? |
| Stock Code 9331FIIED, IIED 2004 paperback 18 pages Price USD 9.00 |
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This paper considers the position of women in the social dynamics regulating access to farmland by different members of Hausa households. How does Hausa society manage land ownership within households when changing dynamics and constant challenges from a range of factors require new mechanisms for land redistribution, which are subsequently accepted and recognised by everyone? Are the prevailing social rules influenced by population growth, the reduction in farmland caused by unfavourable ecological factors, and social and economic factors arising from the allocation of land for other priorities? Do these rules guarantee any kind of equity? Is there a point at which pressure on land is such that concerns about equity disappear and land is simply monopolized by the strongest group? |
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| Women’s access to land: the de-feminisation of agriculture in southern Niger ? |
| Stock Code 9328IIED, IIED 2004 paperback 16 pages Price USD 9.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
This paper considers the position of women in the social dynamics regulating access to farmland by different members of Hausa households. How does Hausa society manage land ownership within households when changing dynamics and constant challenges from a range of factors require new mechanisms for land redistribution, which are subsequently accepted and recognised by everyone? Are the prevailing social rules influenced by population growth, the reduction in farmland caused by unfavourable ecological factors, and social and economic factors arising from the allocation of land for other priorities? Do these rules guarantee any kind of equity? Is there a point at which pressure on land is such that concerns about equity disappear and land is simply monopolized by the strongest group? |
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